Totally false. The electrons in the WB do NOT follow field lines though they approximate it when passing thru the cusps. At most other times they are effectively reflecting off the quasi-spherical wiffleball field. And if one were to be found for some reason following a field line on the wiffleball, it would leave the field line when that line made it's ~ 90 degree turn (left?) out the cusp. These are not nice gradually curving field lines. They are nearly tangential over most of the wiffleball until they become almost instantly radial. The electrons will NOT track the field around the corner.WizWom wrote: An electron will orbit from North pole to South pole, along a magnetic field line. So, you want the North poles to have much more area than south poles.
A cusp is a void in the tangential magnetic field. Point cusps occur at the center of real or virtual coils (the toruses and triangles of the WB6) where the field is running radially along the center of rotation (symmetry) of the magnet. Line cusps are where seperated conductors of opposite current direction cause a very STRONG radial field between them with no tangential component. Funny cusps and their varient the X cusp are NOT the same. Point and Line cusps have STRONG fields that are radial. For funny and X cusps, the void in the tangential component is due to a complete lack of field due to the meeting at a single point of an even number (at least 4) of alternating fields. In the F&X cusps, there is NO net current around the cusp.WizWom wrote: But, if you have a hole in your grid with some conductors around it going one way, and others going the opposite way (as viewed from outside) then there is NO pole; that is, the magnetic fields have canceled in at least part of the hole. And that is a cusp, in a nutshell.
Totally wrong. The line-like cusps in WB6 are where the funny cusps would have been if the WB6 was indeed like the patented Polywell. It was not. The corners (virtual triangles) have point cusps like the real coils; well, badly twisted point cusps since the virtual fields are concave sided rather than convex or straight.WizWom wrote:The "line cusps" in WB-6 were where the cube edges were, the "funny cusps" where the corners were.
This is true.WizWom wrote:You can squash the coils into more squarish shapes, or add more coils, in order to LIMIT these, but they cannot be removed (unless you figure out how to make a magnetic monopole).
I hope not, cuz you would have gotten it all wrong!WizWom wrote:Does that clear things up some?
