Measurement of UHF magnetic flux.
In Essex the Time(+4D) Lords need help.
To fix disturbance in the Force
It could be a Gigahertz magnetic flux problem
Has anyone got a better tool than the Hallmeter?
Measurement of UHF magnetic flux.
In Essex the Time(+4D) Lords need help.
To fix disturbance in the Force
It could be a Gigahertz magnetic flux problem
Has anyone got a better tool than the Hallmeter?
Whatever I'm actually measuring in the electrolytic tests I have been doing lately (possibly bad internal conduction through the electrodes, which have a very short to non-existing electrode gap in my case) I seem to sometimes get RF noise associated with operation that is best heard at the lowest selectable frequency range (530 kHz) on my small transistor AM radio, which I found to be an interesting tool to observe if there anything interesting going on.
lowest selectable frequency range (530 kHz
Maybe if you can find some cheap CB radios (500 MHz) you can hear more.
Wyttenbach says the excited atomic nuclei transmit energy as radiation PLUS UUHF alternating magnetic flux.
The radio noise may be the secondary effect of all these atomic transmitters alternating mag fields on antenna bits in your reactor.. bits of conducting metal.
I suspect that in my case I would hear more at lower frequencies than 530 kHz. At higher AM frequency bands I tend to get less of the same noises. However I must stress again that this interference I sometimes get is probably normal and due to something akin to bad electrical contact rather than atomic transitions.