On Mon, 13 Jun 2005, Frederick Sparber wrote:

> Bill. Wouldn't the water vapor (or the O2 which has a high electron
> affinity) in the air flowing over the red hot hair dryer heating element
> cause the loss of electrons to the air stream?

Is the air coming from a hair dryer also a flow of charge?  I've never
heard of this, but it should be easy to detect with an electrometer.
Also, it would charge any object struck by the air, and I don't think this
happens.




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William J. Beaty                            SCIENCE HOBBYIST website
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