Sujet : Re: Scalar waves
De : ttt_heg (at) *nospam* web.de (Thomas Heger)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativity sci.physics sci.mathDate : 07. May 2024, 08:50:44
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <l9u4qbFj3inU4@mid.individual.net>
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User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Am Montag000006, 06.05.2024 um 19:28 schrieb Ollis Kalakos:
J. J. Lodder wrote:
Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> wrote:
Therefore the Ampere measures the strength of electrical current, which
is therefore the dimension, to which the unit Ampere belongs.
>
DO look up what physicists mean when they use the word 'dimension'
in the context of unit systems. It is not your fantasy meaning,
both wrong, the strength is actually the Intensity, which is directly
related to space and time. The coulomb is related to space and the second
to time. These physicists are unable to translate units!
Apparently you mean 'current density'.
But that is something else, because that quantity contains 'space' and measures the current through an area-unit.
The usual interpretation of 'current' ignores that quantity and sums up the current over the entire wire in question, while the term current density does not.
TH