Horace wrote:

> You [WB] wrote: "- if I tap upon the HV wire with a finger, the furrow in  
> the mist jerks after a short delay, maybe .05sec for 13cm, that's  
> five MPH (can't visualize KPH)".

This made me think that if we find a way to measure more accurately the delay, 
and therefore the velocity of a hypothetical carrier responsible for this 
delay, then we can determine the carrier's mobility by dividing the velocity by 
the average e-field strength (voltage/distance). If we find something close to 
the mobility of air ions (2*10^-4 m/s per V/m), then air ions are probably 
responsible for the delay. If we find a much lower mobility then it's something 
else.

As an example of such a computation, pretending WB's rough figures above are 
accurate, and assuming a 10kV voltage, the velocity would be 13*10^-2/(5*10^-2) 
= 2.6 m/s, the average field strength would be 10*10^3/(13*10^-2)= 77*10^3 V/m, 
so the mobility would be 2.6/77*10^3 = 3.4*10^-5 m/s per V/m which would be ~ 6 
times less mobile than air ions.

Michel

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Horace Heffner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2007 11:19 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:ion currents in pingpong balls


> 
> On Jun 5, 2007, at 12:02 PM, William Beaty wrote:
> 
>>
>> It is possible that all these phenomena are created by  
>> Electrospray, where
>> a droplet clinging to a charged surface begins emitting a series of
>> microscopic charged droplets.   An older form of ink-jet printer  
>> was based
>> on this type of electrostatic droplet-series emission.
> 
> 
> You wrote: "- if I tap upon the HV wire with a finger, the furrow in  
> the mist jerks after a short delay, maybe .05sec for 13cm, that's  
> five MPH (can't visualize KPH)".  That's a sign the thread maintains  
> *tension*, which would not be possible if it were a string of like  
> charged drops.  HV jet drops move much faster than 5 MPH, and can not  
> sustain beam continuity over long distances, yet: "Occasionally I see  
> a very "powerful" ion-thread, one which can extend itself more than  
> 2ft ...".
> 
> More convincing: "- When I used a soda straw and blew upon a thread  
> with all my might, the dot in the mist only moved a little. The 5mm  
> dot was changed to a 10mm x 30mm blotch. INCREDIBLY BIZARRE! The air  
> blast either causes the thread to spread out into a narrow fan, or it  
> causes it to vibrate at high speed so that the thread tip traces out  
> an oblong blotch in the mist. These threads are robust! Not at all  
> like smoke, they are more like carbon-fiber spiderwebs under high  
> linear tension. "
> 
> Doesn't sound like charged ink-jet drops to me: "I've seen two  
> threads with 5mm spacing between them, yet they were 15cm long. If  
> they were highly charged, they would repel apart .... - I've seen  
> pairs of threads come from a fingernail top, extend down about 10cm  
> and apparantly follow the field lines, all the while maintaining a  
> distance from each other of about 1cm! They don't seem to repel each  
> other much."
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Horace Heffner
>

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