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#1
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In 1867 Lorenz wrote: " Ludvig Valentin Lorenz, "On the identity of the
vibrations of light with electrical currents," Philosophical Magazine, Vol. 34, 1867, p. 287-301" http://books.google.pl/books?id=caJd...page&q&f=false On p. 301 he wrote: "The present general opinion regards light as consisting of backward and forward motions of particles of aether." If this were the case the electrical current would be the progressive motion of the aether in the direction of the electrical current." In today's words: "Light is the oscillatory flow of electrons". Light and radio waves are the same. Are the radio waves the oscillatory flow of electrons? S* |
#2
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![]() "Jeff" napisal w wiadomosci ... On 19/04/2012 08:55, Szczepan Bialek wrote: In 1867 Lorenz wrote: " Ludvig Valentin Lorenz, "On the identity of the vibrations of light with electrical currents," Philosophical Magazine, Vol. 34, 1867, p. 287-301" http://books.google.pl/books?id=caJd...page&q&f=false On p. 301 he wrote: "The present general opinion regards light as consisting of backward and forward motions of particles of aether." If this were the case the electrical current would be the progressive motion of the aether in the direction of the electrical current." In today's words: "Light is the oscillatory flow of electrons". Light and radio waves are the same. Are the radio waves the oscillatory flow of electrons? S* The present general opinion *DOES NOT* regards light or *Radio waves* as consisting of backward and forward motions of particles of aether. The present general opinion regards the space as "rare plasma" (ions and electrons). So Are the radio waves the oscillatory flow of electrons? S* |
#3
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Szczepan Bialek wrote:
In 1867 Lorenz wrote: " Ludvig Valentin Lorenz, "On the identity of the vibrations of light with electrical currents," Philosophical Magazine, Vol. 34, 1867, p. 287-301" http://books.google.pl/books?id=caJd...page&q&f=false On p. 301 he wrote: "The present general opinion regards light as consisting of backward and forward motions of particles of aether." He was wrong on several counts. He also died well before Einstein and others came along and got it right. That's the problem with obsessing over stuff that was written 150 years ago, a lot of it was found to be wrong. Lorenz was wrong about the composition of light. Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. In today's words: "Light is the oscillatory flow of electrons". Nope, in todays words light is electromagnetic radiation that is visible to the human eye. Light and radio waves are the same. This is one of the very few true statements you have ever made. Are the radio waves the oscillatory flow of electrons? No. The phrase "oscillatory flow of electrons" is gibberish. |
#4
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Szczepan Bialek wrote:
The present general opinion regards the space as "rare plasma" (ions and electrons). No, it does not. So Are the radio waves the oscillatory flow of electrons? No. The phrase "oscillatory flow of electrons" is gibberish and you are an idiot. |
#5
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#6
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"John S" wrote in message
... On 4/19/2012 12:47 PM, wrote: Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. I think that's a good thing. We wouldn't get signals from satellites otherwise. Actually, that begs the question "which planet is the real ground"? John KD5YI Reckon we could hang a dipole all the way from the earth to the moon? What gain would it have and what frequency would it resonate on, I wonder. 73, Ian. |
#7
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On 4/19/2012 2:07 PM, Ian wrote:
"John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 12:47 PM, wrote: Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. I think that's a good thing. We wouldn't get signals from satellites otherwise. Actually, that begs the question "which planet is the real ground"? John KD5YI Reckon we could hang a dipole all the way from the earth to the moon? No. What gain would it have and what frequency would it resonate on, I wonder. Well, lessee... gain would be the same as any dipole, i.e. about 1.76dBi not considering resistive losses because you did not specify a conductor size. Resonant frequency would be ~.372 Hz. This does not include the "capacitive hats" of the earth and moon. 73, Ian. Where would "ground" be? 73, John |
#8
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![]() "John S" wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 2:07 PM, Ian wrote: "John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 12:47 PM, wrote: Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. I think that's a good thing. We wouldn't get signals from satellites otherwise. Actually, that begs the question "which planet is the real ground"? John KD5YI Reckon we could hang a dipole all the way from the earth to the moon? No. What gain would it have and what frequency would it resonate on, I wonder. Well, lessee... gain would be the same as any dipole, i.e. about 1.76dBi not considering resistive losses because you did not specify a conductor size. Resonant frequency would be ~.372 Hz. This does not include the "capacitive hats" of the earth and moon. 73, Ian. Where would "ground" be? 73, John John, "ground" is so "last century" along with "dial-up" and "Cathode Ray Tube in my television". Forget "ground". Say "planet" instead. Is that better? 73, Ian. |
#9
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On 4/19/2012 2:43 PM, Ian wrote:
"John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 2:07 PM, Ian wrote: "John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 12:47 PM, wrote: Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. I think that's a good thing. We wouldn't get signals from satellites otherwise. Actually, that begs the question "which planet is the real ground"? John KD5YI Reckon we could hang a dipole all the way from the earth to the moon? No. What gain would it have and what frequency would it resonate on, I wonder. Well, lessee... gain would be the same as any dipole, i.e. about 1.76dBi not considering resistive losses because you did not specify a conductor size. Resonant frequency would be ~.372 Hz. This does not include the "capacitive hats" of the earth and moon. 73, Ian. Where would "ground" be? 73, John John, "ground" is so "last century" along with "dial-up" and "Cathode Ray Tube in my television". Forget "ground". Say "planet" instead. Is that better? 73, Ian. I did already. But, *which* planet? |
#10
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"John S" wrote in message
... On 4/19/2012 2:43 PM, Ian wrote: "John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 2:07 PM, Ian wrote: "John wrote in message ... On 4/19/2012 12:47 PM, wrote: Marconi was wrong about antennas having to be grounded to work. I think that's a good thing. We wouldn't get signals from satellites otherwise. Actually, that begs the question "which planet is the real ground"? John KD5YI Reckon we could hang a dipole all the way from the earth to the moon? No. What gain would it have and what frequency would it resonate on, I wonder. Well, lessee... gain would be the same as any dipole, i.e. about 1.76dBi not considering resistive losses because you did not specify a conductor size. Resonant frequency would be ~.372 Hz. This does not include the "capacitive hats" of the earth and moon. 73, Ian. Where would "ground" be? 73, John John, "ground" is so "last century" along with "dial-up" and "Cathode Ray Tube in my television". Forget "ground". Say "planet" instead. Is that better? 73, Ian. I did already. But, *which* planet? Oh - sorry about missing that, John. How about going for any two planets which form a straight line? This is surely better than relying on just one planet which might develop an eccentric orbit (which we could name the "S****pan orbit"). Besides which, someone, sometime in the future, might want to hang a long wire between the planets (but how much would the feeder cost). Okay - if you prefer only on planet then I suggest Saturn (let's talk halo aerials) or Jupiter with its jolly red spot (well, you try getting a tube of cream THAT big). I suppose the best evidence of using ground / planet is moonbounce - uses the ground / planet without an aerial at that end of the path. 73, Ian. |
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