Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
(snipped)
>
> Do you have a Leyden Jar readily available? I am building one for
> the experiments ahead. But if you have a Leyden Jar immediately
> available, can you try to position a outside external magnet so
> as the Leyden Jar becomes diamagnetic.
>
> To prove my theory really only needs to prove that a Capacitor Current
> can be diamagnetic but that a Regular Current is impossible to be
> diamagnetic. It is as simple as that.
>
It has been my observation that so very often, foreign authors of
English written
books in physics are so much better than USA physics authors.
Comparing the two books "Cold Wars" Matricon & Waysand 2003 and
"Superconductivity" Ginzburg & Andryushin 2004, one by French authors
and the second by Russian authors are far superior to USA authors
on superconductivity. And the problem, I believe, is that these
foreign
authors want to teach their subject with clarity and have a pleasure
in writing
their books whereas the USA authors make little attempt at clarity.
Reading Ginzburg & Andryushin "Superconductivity" 2004, pages 14 -16
--- quoting Ginzburg & Andryushin page 14 on Diamagnetism ---
For a magnetic field, the boundary of a body is in most cases not a
wall that
would obstruct its "flow", but merely a small step at the bottom of
the pool
altering the depth and thus slightly affecting this "flow".
The magnetic field strength in a substance changes by a fraction of a
hundredth
or even thousandth of a percent as compared to its strength outside
the substance
--- end quoting ---
I do not know if my experiment of a Normal Current flow in copper wire
affected by a magnet will reveal a hundreth or thousandth percent
change in current.
So that my other experiment of Capacitor Current set-up from a
Wimshurst
generator is able to measure "perfect diamagnetism".
I do not think I can get an ammeter or amp-meter that sensitive enough
to measure
the affect of the magnet in either of the Normal Current or the
Capacitor Current.
Archimedes Plutonium
/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies