26 research outputs found
Classical diamagnetism, magnetic interaction energies, and repulsive forces in magnetized plasmas
The Bohr-van Leeuwen theorem is often summarized as saying that there is no
classical magnetic susceptibility, in particular no diamagnetism. This is
seriously misleading. The theorem assumes position dependent interactions but
this is not required by classical physics. Since the work of Darwin in 1920 it
has been known that the magnetism due to classical charged point particles can
only be described by allowing velocity dependent interactions in the
Lagrangian. Legendre transformation to an approximate Hamiltonian can give an
estimate of the Darwin diamagnetism for a system of charged point particles.
Comparison with experiment, however, requires knowledge of the number of
classically behaving electrons in the sample. A new repulsive effective
many-body force, which should be relevant in plasmas, is predicted by the
Hamiltonian.Comment: added references, revise
Difference in Coulomb Electrostatic Energy for Localized versus Delocalized Electrons and Electron PairsâExact Results Based on Cubic Charge Distributions
Wigner showed that a sufficiently thin electron gas will condense into a crystal of localized electrons. Here, we show, using a model based on cubic charge distributions that gives exact results, that the Coulomb repulsion energy of localized charge distributions is lower than that of delocalized distributions in spite of the fact that the total overall charge distribution is the same. Assuming a simple cubic geometry, we obtain an explicit result for the energy reduction. This reduction results from the exclusion of self-interactions of the electrons. The corresponding results for electron pairs are also discussed
Difference in Coulomb Electrostatic Energy for Localized versus Delocalized Electrons and Electron PairsâExact Results Based on Cubic Charge Distributions
Wigner showed that a sufficiently thin electron gas will condense into a crystal of localized electrons. Here, we show, using a model based on cubic charge distributions that gives exact results, that the Coulomb repulsion energy of localized charge distributions is lower than that of delocalized distributions in spite of the fact that the total overall charge distribution is the same. Assuming a simple cubic geometry, we obtain an explicit result for the energy reduction. This reduction results from the exclusion of self-interactions of the electrons. The corresponding results for electron pairs are also discussed
The Magnetic Interaction Energy between an Infinite Solenoid and a Passing Point Charge
The standard expression for the magnetic interaction energy used in the study of the Aharonov-Bohm effect is investigated. We calculate the magnetic interaction energy between a point charge and an infinite solenoid from first principles. Two alternative expressions are used: the scalar products of the currents with the vector potentials and the scalar product of the magnetic fields. The alternatives are seen to agree. The latter approach also involves taking into account surface integrals at infinity, which are shown to be zero. Our model problem indicates no classical Aharonov-Bohm effect, but we also discuss the normally neglected fact of energy non-conservation. The problem is treated from the point of view of Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics.Peer reviewe
Observation of abundant heat production from a reactor device and of isotopic changes in the fuel
New results are presented from an extended experimental investigation of anomalous heat production in a special type of
reactor tube operating at high temperatures. The reactor, named E-Cat, is charged with a small amount of hydrogen-loaded
nickel powder plus some additives, mainly Lithium. The reaction is primarily initiated by heat from resistor coils around the
reactor tube. Measurements of the radiated power from the reactor were performed with high-resolution thermal imaging
cameras. The measurements of electrical power input were performed with a large bandwidth three-phase power analyzer.
Data were collected during 32 days of running in March 2014. The reactor operating point was set to about 1260 ÂșC in the
first half of the run, and at about 1400 °C in the second half. The measured energy balance between input and output heat
yielded a COP factor of about 3.2 and 3.6 for the 1260 ÂșC and 1400 ÂșC runs, respectively . The total net energy obtained
during the 32 days run was about 1.5 MWh. This amount of energy is far more than can be obtained from any known
chemical sources in the small reactor volume.
A sample of the fuel was carefully examined with respect to its isotopic composition before the run and after the run, using
several standard methods: XPS, EDS, SIMS, ICP-MS and ICP-AES. The isotope composition in Lithium and Nickel was found to agree with the natural composition before the run, while after the run it was found to have changed substantially .
Nuclear reactions are therefore indicated to be present in the run process, which however is hard to reconcile with the fact
that no radioactivity was detected outside the reactor during the run
The comfortable roller coaster -- on the shape of tracks with constant normal force
A particle that moves along a smooth track in a vertical plane is influenced
by two forces: gravity and normal force. The force experienced by roller
coaster riders is the normal force, so a natural question to ask is: what shape
of the track gives a normal force of constant magnitude? Here we solve this
problem. It turns out that the solution is related to the Kepler problem; the
trajectories in velocity space are conic sections.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Static deformation of heavy spring due to gravity and centrifugal force
The static equilibrium deformation of a heavy spring due to its own weight is
calculated for two cases. First for a spring hanging in a constant
gravitational field, then for a spring which is at rest in a rotating system
where it is stretched by the centrifugal force. Two different models are
considered. First a discrete model assuming a finite number of point masses
connected by springs of negligible weight. Then the continuum limit of this
model. In the second case the differential equation for the deformation is
obtained by demanding that the potential energy is minimized. In this way a
simple application of the variational calculus is obtained.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure