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You could see it quite easily on a cheapo oscilloscope, I should think. Don't know why I didn't do it. myself, when I had the chance - I used to have access to a Range Rover, kitted out as a mobile lab and did frequent field strength and other measurements at all frequencies - including 198kHz.I guess it was all so 'obvious' at the time that I didn't need to prove it for myself.Lightarrow - I will have to look at your stuff in detail. Did you look at the link on my previous post?
My first reaction is that, when you integrate your E, do you not get an 'i' multiplier for your B?
www.play-hookey.com/optics/transverse_electromagnetic_wave.htmlI've just spent ages trying to find a reference. Here it is.It says it better than I have.
I am now convinced that remote from the antenna B & H are in phase but is there not a difference close to the antenna before the electro magnetic wave becomes established.I believe the text book I referred to was by 'Sterling' but I can find no reference to it but I recall drawings of a vertical antenna with the current running up and down and a horizontal circular magnetic field spreading out from it
It is sometimes claimed that light is slowed on its passage through a block of media by being absorbed and re-emitted by the atoms, only traveling at full speed through the vacuum between atoms. This explanation is incorrect and runs into problems if you try to use it to explain the details of refraction beyond the simple slowing of the signal.
whereas absorbtion tends to occur at relatively well defined frequencies.
http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy205/lecture_18.htm9th row from below:<<This equation can only be satisfied if a=0 (i.e. E and B are in phase)>>
I sometimes feel like one of the panelist on the Stephen Fry quiz program "Q".I offer the commonly held answer to a question only to have it demolished by greater experts.
Lightarrow:Quotehttp://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy205/lecture_18.htm9th row from below:<<This equation can only be satisfied if a=0 (i.e. E and B are in phase)>>I hate to disagree (he lied) with established thinking but the expressions used in all the texts contains the complex form of the wave. Can we be sure that the relevant part has been chosen in producing the final answer? My maths is not good enough to be certain but there seems to be a loophole here. Not all solutions have reality in maths.
But, more to the point, can you answer my objection on the grounds that free em waves appear to be fundamentally different from all other waves in how they transport the energy?Even an electric wave travels along an LC delay line with a phase difference between volts and current - or E and B fields on a transmission line. What happens when it gets to the end of a transmission line and encounters a dipole radiator? Can there be a sudden hiccup in the phase of one of the fields?I am confused.