|
|
|
|
|
by stunningllama
408 days ago
|
|
I recreated Veritasium's setup in my simulator and measured the current through the load resistor, the results of which are here:
https://imgur.com/a/sxVihf0 The gap between the wires is about 1 micrometer, so light should take about 3 fs to propagate through. The simulation output approximately matches this prediction, and over the first few tens of femtoseconds the current increases, with a jump at around 70 fs due to the reflected wave. All of this is pretty much in line with the results of Veritasium's experiment. Thanks for bringing it up. I might include this as another example in my sim. |
|
These are cool _ wave propagation vids too; Nils Berglund wave visualizations: https://youtu.be/v0cZjOIfwos?si=07w2Wd4dPlGmNxHp
_: photon, fluid, standing transverse,, plasma
What about longitudinal waves in plasma, superconductors, and superfluids though? https://www.google.com/search?q=What+about+longitudinal+wave...
I suppose vorticity doesn't matter that much for classical electronic circuits