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Misconceptions About Electricity

A lot is. Audible hum certainly always is. It's possible that the sensation produced against the skin is mechanical, especially at low levels before it becomes uncomfortable/painful. Not sure where the threshold is or what experiments have been done to distinguish it.
I've accidentally grabbed 60Hz electricity a few times all ready. I've known I have grabbed 120V at least once but the other times I don't know what I was actually grabbing. It was the same sensation as sucking on a 9V battery. Tingly.
I would strongly recommend you read this site: http://www.eskimo.com/~billb/miscon/eleca.html.
You know.... The more I read this the more I realize that electricity is pretty dam complicated.
 
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I've accidentally grabbed 60Hz electricity a few times all ready. I've known I have grabbed 120V at least once but the other times I don't know what I was actually grabbing. It was the same sensation as sucking on a 9V battery. Tingly.

You know.... The more I read this the more I realize that electricity is pretty dam complicated.

A good physics book on Electromagnetics and one on circuitry like the classic Horowitz and Hill is great for learning this stuff.
 
The drift velocity for electrons in a circuit is quite small, as in millimeters per second.

What really bakes your noodle is that this drift velocity, tiny as it is, is still enough to cause the relativistic effect that is magnetism. As you know, it manages to be significant because the electromagnetic force is so amazingly strong that even a tiny, tiny fractional difference in effective charge (basically caused by length contraction of the cloud of charge carriers) is enough to create quite strong effects.

Drift velocity almost never matters.

Given that it's the source of all magnetism, I'd say it matters quite often :).

- Dr. Trintignant
 
Misconceptions about electicity? That it plays no significant role due to charge cancellation on large scales. Plasmas allow such charge separation, and 99% of the universe is in this state. So I would say this is the one major misconception. Like the surprise when they found electrical birkeland currents directly connecting the sun all the way to the poles of the earth. They never expected that one.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007/11dec_themis.htm
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/northern_lights_multi.html
 
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Misconceptions about electicity? That it plays no significant role due to charge cancellation on large scales. Plasmas allow such charge separation, and 99% of the universe is in this state. So I would say this is the one major misconception. Like the surprise when they found electrical birkeland currents directly connecting the sun all the way to the poles of the earth. They never expected that one.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007/11dec_themis.htm
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/northern_lights_multi.html
Misconceptions not delusions. Every time you post makes me wish harder and harder that dark matter is actually found.
 
Misconceptions not delusions. Every time you post makes me wish harder and harder that dark matter is actually found.


Productive post :clap: Really progressed the discussion, and gives me plenty to reply to :rolleyes:

Maybe next time you can actually explain the actual reasons behind your views without mere offhand irrelivant jibes. Better luck next time mate.
 
A shame they barely mention the non linear physics of EC's in plasma, which is an entirely different matter where many of these laws break down
Shame? I find your comment unfair. For one thing, the page does mention plasma, but more importantly, the page's intention is to clarify and debunk the most common misconceptions about electricity, which are not related to plasma.
 
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I did my apprentiship at a factory, there were many interresting teories from the workers when things broke down. Similary now on the ship-
Fortunately almost all got the basic idea of "don´t touch", and don´t try fix it yourself.

I don´t recall how slow the electrons are, but know that the electrical energy is moving practical instantanius.
And AC has root2 higher peak voltage than DC and are therefore slightly (root2) more dangerous.
 

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