|
|
Is the Displacement current a longitudinal wave?; Displacement current as neutrinos #1203 New Physics #1323 ATOM TOTALITY 5th ed
Posted:
Feb 5, 2013 11:32 AM
|
|
Alright, there is a good chance that the displacement current in physics is magnetic monopoles in space and that they are neutrinos of a longitudinal wave. Keep in mind that in the Symmetrical Maxwell Equations I need to solve what the Displacement current in Ampere law is and the magnetic current density in the Faraday law is. So I am looking for an argument that both of these are longitudinal waves.
--- quoting Halliday and Resnick in 3rd edition, Fundamentals of Physics, ?1988, on page 837 --- The difference is not caused by the fact that one current is a conduction current and the other is a displacement current. Under the same conditions, both kinds of current are equally effective in generating a magnetic field. The difference arises because the conduction current, in this case, is confined to a thin wire but the displacement current is spread out over an area equal to the surface area of the capacitor plates. Thus, the capacitor behaves like a "fat wire" of radius 55 mm, carrying a (displacement) current of 130 mA. Its largest magnetic effect, which occurs at the capacitor edge, is much smaller than would be the case at the surface of a thin wire. --- end quoting H&R ---
--
Google's archives are top-heavy in hate-spew from search-engine- bombing. Only Drexel's Math Forum has done a excellent, simple and fair archiving of AP posts for the past 15 years as seen here:
http://mathforum.org/kb/profile.jspa?userID=499986
Archimedes Plutonium http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
|
|