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Unlikely to separate charges as the front and rear are connected by a conductor. There are certainly circulating currents, however.
You can't separate + and - static charges on a conductor.
The net charge distributes itself over the surface of the conductor.
QuoteThe net charge distributes itself over the surface of the conductor.(+) + (-) = 0
You can't separate + and - static charges on a conductor.The magnetic field induces circulating currents in the aircraft but doesn't alter its potential difference to the earth or cloud.
A conductor through a magnetic field will produce a PD
And an aircraft flying well above the clouds is less likely to be struck than one flying within the clouds, or between clouds and ground.
Quote from: alancalverd on 30/08/2022 17:43:38You can't separate + and - static charges on a conductor.How does this work then?http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/sc526_notes01/charging_induction.html
Your diagrams show a negative static charge accumulating at one end of a conductor and a positive charge at the other. The definition of a conductor is that charges flow freely through it, therefore opposite charges cannot accumulate anywhere - they will flow and cancel each other.
Quote from: PetrochemicalsA conductor through a magnetic field will produce a PDHowever, in a lightning strike, the resistance of an airplane fuselage is much lower than the resistance of air (especially before breakdown), so lightning is very likely to take that path...
I'm still waiting for a sensible reply to this.
what alancalverd said was that on a unitary conductor you can't have a potential difference between two zones(
So what happens if you earth the bottom of the plate?
That charge separation only occurs because of the contrived situation where a powerful electric field is at play.