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RE: Terry's Test - Two Manifestations of Charge



Original poster: "David Thomson" <dwt@xxxxxxxxxxxx>

Hi Antonio,

> The setup: http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/2sparks4.jpg
> Running: http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/2sparks2.jpg
> Sparks and light in the tube:
> http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/2sparks3.jpg
> Detail: http://www.coe.ufrj.br/~acmq/tesla/2sparks1.jpg
> The average current is about 50 uA.

That's a really neat setup.

> I tried to reproduce the same experiment using an
> electrostatic machine. It worked. And the explanation is
trivial.
> I placed a fluorescent tube over a metal plate (30x30 cm),
> over an insulating support, and placed the two pins at one
> end of the tube close to the two terminals of the machine.
> When the machine operates, a continuous stream of sparks
> flows between the two terminals and the two pins. Both
> identical due to the symmetry.
> If I connect one of the terminals to the metal plate in
> contact with the tube, the tube starts to glow and the sparks
> at that side are clearly more intense.
> The reason is simple: The tube over the plate is acting as a
> capacitor, charged by the weak sparks. It discharges
> periodically with an intense spark between the other pin and
> the terminal connected to the plate, that is the outer plate
> of the capacitor.
> (I observed that I can obtain a more intense effect if I made
> the connection between the metal plate and the machine
> terminal through a Leyden jar. The jar gets charged through
> the leakage across the surface of the glass tube, and the
> sparks are longer.)

This is very interesting.  The tube and plate are acting like a
capacitor.  That makes sense.  But wouldn't the capacitor act as
a transformer and reduce the potential in order to increase the
current?  In other words, the thinner spark would be higher
potential, lower current.  The thicker and brighter spark would
be lower potential, higher current.  The total power in each
spark would be the same, correct?

Dave