Build a Radio Wave Detector with Balls of Aluminum Foil
37 points
2 days ago
| 5 comments
| wired.com
| HN
dvh
3 hours ago
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Mehdi from electroboom did video on this, the range is few meters. If I remember correctly the spark breaks oxide layers and makes contact.
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moebrowne
2 hours ago
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thunderbong
1 hour ago
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Delightful! Thank you!

So much more fun than the article.

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srean
27 minutes ago
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Mehdi from Electroboom and Michael from Vsauce are my two favorite bat shit crazy unhinged people of the internet.
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alexaholic
3 hours ago
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self_awareness
4 hours ago
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Wait, so you're telling me that my hat instead of stopping mind control attempts is actually AN ANTENNA?
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CamperBob2
2 days ago
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That voltage from the crystal creates an electric field, which exerts a force on free charges in the air. (There's always some free charges floating around, like electrons and ions.) These charges accelerate and collide with air molecules, kicking loose more free electrons that also accelerate and collide, and so on, in an exponential chain reaction. We call this an electron avalanche. And guess what happens? Accelerating charges create a changing electric field—which, yup, creates a changing magnetic field, etc., and that disturbance radiates outward as an electromagnetic wave.

Huh? It has nothing to do with "free charges in the air." That's... kind of the whole idea behind EM theory.

That said, I've never heard of anyone building a detector out of balls of aluminum foil, so that's pretty cool. I'd classify it as a rectifying detector rather than a coherer, though, because nothing is physically moving. A real coherer had to be physically bumped or tapped between received signals.

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coldcity_again
15 minutes ago
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This coherer also must be bumped between received sigs.
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nom
1 hour ago
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That is how air becomes conductive.
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hasley
11 minutes ago
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Electromagnetic waves can exist in vacuum. No (conductive) air is required.
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voidUpdate
5 hours ago
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I don't think a radio wave detector would ever stop detecting these days, unless you put it inside a faraday cage
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