| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"Hindian" |
| Date: |
10 Jan 2005 01:27:20 PM |
| Object: |
Using the Earth as a battery |
Since the earth stores billions of electrons, is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery? I guess its not a good
conductor but has any method been devised to make it a good conductor?
What about the ionosphere. Lots of charged particles there. If there
was some way to tap into the ionosphere, would that mean free flow of
electricity to the earth?
Just thinking out loud.
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| User: "Uncle Al" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 02:45:57 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons,
Hey schmuck - 96,500 Coulombs/mole electrons near enough. "billions
of electrons" HA HA HA!
Not a one. The entire planet is electrically neutral. Make a gold
leaf electormeter. Nothing.
< is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
[snip crap]
A battery is a set of two or more electrochemical cells. What is the
other planet, idiot?
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf
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| User: "peter" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 03:02:08 PM |
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Uncle Al wrote:
Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons,
Hey schmuck - 96,500 Coulombs/mole electrons near enough. "billions
of electrons" HA HA HA!
Not a one. The entire planet is electrically neutral. Make a gold
leaf electormeter. Nothing.
< is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
[snip crap]
A battery is a set of two or more electrochemical cells. What is the
other planet, idiot?
I admit, Iwas a bit puzzled by this abusively rude answer, seemingly to
my response. Could you couple yourself in the future to the message you
are commenting this vehemently? Still better, moderate your excessive prose!
peter
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| User: "Uncle Al" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 04:58:41 PM |
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peter wrote:
Uncle Al wrote:
Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons,
Hey schmuck - 96,500 Coulombs/mole electrons near enough. "billions
of electrons" HA HA HA!
Not a one. The entire planet is electrically neutral. Make a gold
leaf electrometer. Nothing.
< is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
[snip crap]
A battery is a set of two or more electrochemical cells. What is the
other planet, idiot?
I admit, Iwas a bit puzzled by this abusively rude answer, seemingly to
my response. Could you couple yourself in the future to the message you
are commenting this vehemently? Still better, moderate your excessive prose!
peter
The vehemence of my response is scaled to the stooopidity of your
proposal.
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/sunshine.jpg
Don't you have the slightest inkling of a hint that anything "obvious"
to an untutored layman has already been visited and discarded by
untold numbers of trained (and desperate - untenured faculty) minds?
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 07:00:42 PM |
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"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/sunshine.jpg
No one cares what you look like Uncle Al. However! Thanks for waxing
your legs before snapping that shot of yourself.
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| User: "Uncle Al" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 08:02:15 PM |
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"±2°"@¬¢s.org wrote:
"Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/sunshine.jpg
No one cares what you look like Uncle Al. However! Thanks for waxing
your legs before snapping that shot of yourself.
Teenager, eh? Globally bathetic.
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 01:32:52 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons, is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
How many electrons do you think there are in a grain of sand?
What's your definition of battery?
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| User: "Hindian" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 02:43:13 PM |
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On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 19:32:52 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons, is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
How many electrons do you think there are in a grain of sand?
What's your definition of battery?
I'm sure there are many. But I'm talking about free electons. As in
electrons not bound to atoms. When lightning discharges to ground,
where do all the electrons go.
Does not the earth carry a charge of some sort, why can't we use this
charge?
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 02:52:13 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 19:32:52 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons, is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery?
How many electrons do you think there are in a grain of sand?
What's your definition of battery?
I'm sure there are many. But I'm talking about free electons. As in
electrons not bound to atoms. When lightning discharges to ground,
where do all the electrons go.
Does not the earth carry a charge of some sort, why can't we use this
charge?
The Earth is electrically neutral.... remove electrons from atom (as
in a thunder cloud) and they jump back (as in lightning). The energy to
drive thunderstorms come from the sun.
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| User: "Hindian" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 03:24:58 PM |
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On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 20:52:13 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
The Earth is electrically neutral.... remove electrons from atom (as
in a thunder cloud) and they jump back (as in lightning). The energy to
drive thunderstorms come from the sun.
I understand free electrons do not remain free for long. But does it
mean there are no electrons free in the earth.
In one of Tesla's experiments, he was trying to transmit electicity
through the earth by simulating a lightning strike. Or so i
understand. I know he didn't succeed (or did he?)
Now if the earth neutralises charges so well/quickly, was that
experiment doomed to failure from the start.
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| User: "Bob Myers" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 06:45:58 PM |
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"Hindian" <hindian@jaihindhindhind.com> wrote in message
news:qhr5u0l2hc5hkpuq1og7svnca602frke5v@4ax.com...
Now if the earth neutralises charges so well/quickly, was that
experiment doomed to failure from the start.
You are thinking of electrons themselves as possessing
energy, when in fact they do not (ignoring, for a moment,
the energy represented by their mass). They possess
CHARGE, but charge is not energy. There is a potential
energy (which is represented by the electric field) that
"comes into being" when two charged particles of opposite sign
are removed from each other's presence (i.e., it takes
energy to do this, and that energy is "stored" in the form
of the field between the charged particles), or conversely
when two particles of the same sign charge are forced
together.
The mechanical analog to this is the potential energy
represented by a mass which has been raised to some
distance above its original position; there is potential
energy due to the attractive force of gravity, which can
then be recovered if the object is permitted to fall. But
this does not mean that the object itself originally
"contained energy" (again ignoring the energy represent
by its mass, courtesy of St. Albert).
Bob M.
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 03:29:31 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 20:52:13 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
The Earth is electrically neutral.... remove electrons from atom (as
in a thunder cloud) and they jump back (as in lightning). The energy to
drive thunderstorms come from the sun.
I understand free electrons do not remain free for long. But does it
mean there are no electrons free in the earth.
You should ask yourself where do free electrons come from?
In one of Tesla's experiments, he was trying to transmit electicity
through the earth by simulating a lightning strike. Or so i
understand. I know he didn't succeed (or did he?)
You should do a search and find out what Tesla was doing.
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| User: "Hindian" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 03:51:59 PM |
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On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 21:29:31 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
You should ask yourself where do free electrons come from?
Well this is my last post on the subject. Perhaps I'm
misunderstanding some basic physics theory.
Free electrons come from chemical/physical reactions where an electron
is removed from orbit of an atom. Not sure if that is what you are
getting at.
When I rub my shoe on a rug, the shoe can pick up static electricity.
Enough to give me a shock if I touch a positively charged object. How
is it possible that tectonic plates of the earth rubbing together so
vigoursly causing an earth quake can release no electrons. Is there
no chemical or physical reaction in the earth generating surplus
electrons.
Maybe I'm too dense for this branch of physics :-(
Thanks for your replies. I'll read up more on Tesla.
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 04:53:11 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 21:29:31 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
You should ask yourself where do free electrons come from?
Well this is my last post on the subject. Perhaps I'm
misunderstanding some basic physics theory.
Free electrons come from chemical/physical reactions where an electron
is removed from orbit of an atom. Not sure if that is what you are
getting at.
Actually you've got it right.... the point is that atoms are neutral
unless some process that requires an energy sources removes electrons
as in your example of shoe on a rug or in a billowing thunder cloud.
And you are right... it happens all around us...
Hindian--I don't want to discourage you. You started the thread wanting
to know if the Earth's free elections could be used as an energy source.
And I want to impart to you that.
1. there is no net imbalance of charge on the earth
2. that energy sources on the earth ultimately derive from the sun
(with the exception of some heat from radioactivity inside the
earth)
3. the Conservation of Energy
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/ConservationofEnergy.html
4. the Laws of Thermodynamics
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/CombinedLawofThermodynamics.html
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/SecondLawofThermodynamics.html
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| User: "tj Frazir" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
11 Jan 2005 10:25:09 AM |
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OK I will..TU
wire stuck end in te ground conetced to a wire
wrapped around a nail and the other end back down in the ground.
A mgnet is bolted to a bike wheel and as you crank the mag turns and
strokes allmost touching the nail end to end.
I cant charge the batt ,,but I can compleat the curcit
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| User: "Jim Black" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 08:34:39 PM |
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Sam Wormley wrote:
Hindian wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 20:52:13 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
The Earth is electrically neutral.... remove electrons from atom
(as
in a thunder cloud) and they jump back (as in lightning). The
energy to
drive thunderstorms come from the sun.
I understand free electrons do not remain free for long. But does
it
mean there are no electrons free in the earth.
You should ask yourself where do free electrons come from?
In one of Tesla's experiments, he was trying to transmit electicity
through the earth by simulating a lightning strike. Or so i
understand. I know he didn't succeed (or did he?)
You should do a search and find out what Tesla was doing.
Are you sure that's really a good idea?
"Thus, it seems that what really happened was that Tesla sent off that
fireball or EMP burst, which collided with that alien intelligence
survey spacecraft!"
http://business.gorge.net/zdkf/kufol/kul-tot.html
"....They had discovered why Tesla was reluctant to put the magnifying
transmitter into operation. Not only could it be used to mess up radio
communication, but also as a global magnetic mind control weapon, and
to control the forces of nature. And the Russians were using it...."
http://www.thelivingweb.net/tesla.html
"in addition, intelligent ufo activity was also being
reported in indonesia. this is not very surprising
since both god's angels and satan's angels would
have a great interest in monitoring the scalar tesla
hyperdimensional technology progress of the us military."
http://www.syzygyjob.net/warissues/messages/96384.shtml
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 08:49:52 PM |
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Jim Black wrote:
Sam Wormley wrote:
Hindian wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 20:52:13 GMT, Sam Wormley <swormley1@mchsi.com>
wrote:
The Earth is electrically neutral.... remove electrons from atom
(as
in a thunder cloud) and they jump back (as in lightning). The
energy to
drive thunderstorms come from the sun.
I understand free electrons do not remain free for long. But does
it
mean there are no electrons free in the earth.
You should ask yourself where do free electrons come from?
In one of Tesla's experiments, he was trying to transmit electicity
through the earth by simulating a lightning strike. Or so i
understand. I know he didn't succeed (or did he?)
You should do a search and find out what Tesla was doing.
Are you sure that's really a good idea?
"Thus, it seems that what really happened was that Tesla sent off that
fireball or EMP burst, which collided with that alien intelligence
survey spacecraft!"
http://business.gorge.net/zdkf/kufol/kul-tot.html
"....They had discovered why Tesla was reluctant to put the magnifying
transmitter into operation. Not only could it be used to mess up radio
communication, but also as a global magnetic mind control weapon, and
to control the forces of nature. And the Russians were using it...."
http://www.thelivingweb.net/tesla.html
"in addition, intelligent ufo activity was also being
reported in indonesia. this is not very surprising
since both god's angels and satan's angels would
have a great interest in monitoring the scalar tesla
hyperdimensional technology progress of the us military."
http://www.syzygyjob.net/warissues/messages/96384.shtml
Good point!
.
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| User: "tj Frazir" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
11 Jan 2005 10:31:51 AM |
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If you were an electron in air and I compressed the air ,,the air gets
hot .
Its ready to give a poke to another cylinder that was pulled down and
made a vacume ..snapp
See what just happend ????????
Not much of a spark but is a spark .
HAY ,,I dint do its not mine ,,its outa th book buster ,,befor you get
kokkii
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| User: "peter" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 02:40:37 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
Since the earth stores billions of electrons, is there any way the
earth could be used as a usable battery? I guess its not a good
conductor but has any method been devised to make it a good conductor?
What about the ionosphere. Lots of charged particles there. If there
was some way to tap into the ionosphere, would that mean free flow of
electricity to the earth?
Just thinking out loud.
Hello,
The system earth-ionosphere is not a battery but rather like a
condenser. The electrical field strength is in normal times
approximately 100 to 150 V/m.
Thats great, would you say. Alas, the dielectric is to performing, too
good an insulator, and all you can expect is a columnal current of about
20pA/m^2.
By the way, the isea is not new and others have been disappointed...
Peter
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| User: "Hindian" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 03:34:14 PM |
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On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 21:40:37 +0100, peter <peo.meyer@libre.fr> wrote:
Hello,
The system earth-ionosphere is not a battery but rather like a
condenser. The electrical field strength is in normal times
approximately 100 to 150 V/m.
Thats great, would you say. Alas, the dielectric is to performing, too
good an insulator, and all you can expect is a columnal current of about
20pA/m^2.
Hi peter,
The US has a project called HAARP which charges up the ionosphere to
study it for communication & defence applications. If they find ways
of overcoming the insulative properties of the ionosphere and
discharging it, perhaps it might be a mass source of power.
Sadly I don't know enough to comment on how that might be possible.
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
10 Jan 2005 05:10:19 PM |
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Hindian wrote:
The US has a project called HAARP which charges up the ionosphere to
study it for communication & defence applications. If they find ways
of overcoming the insulative properties of the ionosphere and
discharging it, perhaps it might be a mass source of power.
HAARP is a scientific endeavor aimed at studying the properties and behavior
of the ionosphere, with particular emphasis on being able to understand and
use it to enhance communications and surveillance systems for both civilian
and defense purposes.
HAARP does *not* in any way *charge* up the ionosphere!
The energy source that ionizes the upper atmosphere is our sun.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
11 Jan 2005 08:23:47 AM |
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Hindian wrote:
What about the ionosphere. Lots of charged particles there. If
there
was some way to tap into the ionosphere, would that mean free flow of
electricity to the earth?
The magnetic field around earth can and has been used to produce
electricity by tethers. A HUGE amount can be produced... the drawback
is that it saps the kinetic energy of the vehicle you're producing
electricity for. So it's a trade off.
Dave
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Using the Earth as a battery |
28 Jan 2005 09:53:12 AM |
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Tethers, as in large towers many miles high? Maybe thick wires
suspended by helium ballons? What about platforms that use the energy
in the ionosphere to power themselves and then beam additional energy
down to ground-based receivers?
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