Herman
How pompous is that? You give me permission to address you only if I do so in a manner you approve?
If I say something in a particular context, and you wish to take issue with it, then yes, I expect you to do so in the same context in which it was said.
So radio transmitters used to explain AC are off limits but you want to use batteries and light bulbs? We're discussing AC, not batteries, which are DC.
Yes, I know we are discussing AC, and yes, I know batteries are DC. But if you alternately change the battery's polarity with respect to the pair of wires feeding the light bulb, you end up with an alternating current. You know, AC.
This is fundamentally no different than your source component, preamplifier or amplifier, all of which are fed from a DC power source, and can even be powered from a battery, yet produce an AC signal at their outputs.
Are you going to argue that audio components are off limits because they use a DC power supply?
The battery in my example was nothing more than a power source. The end result was alternating current in the circuit attached to the power source.
The transmitter example I gave was perfectly valid and you would know that if you understood the concepts.
Your transmitter example was completely irrelevant in the context of what I had said and the argument I was making. We were discussing the appropriateness of using the terms "current" and "flow" as it related to AC. Specifically, in an audio system where the electrical wavelengths are vastly greater than line lengths.
I could have addressed your comments in their own context, but the two situations aren't quite the same and would have to be discussed rather differently than had previously been discussed and I saw that as a distraction which would just further confuse those who may be reading this trying to understand things.
If you can ONLY make your argument by invoking systems which are on the order of the wavelengths involved, then I can only say that your argument isn't holding water. If it did, then you could also make an argument in the context of a system which is a microscopic fraction of a wavelength.
So let's just stick to the original context in which this issue arose.
Again. Wrong. At what magic point does the cable get long enough that all of the sudden this magnetic field appears?
Even with just a short length of cable there will always be some amount of parasitic capacitance which means there will always be some current flow as a result and subsequently a magnetic field.
But talking about parasitics is just a distraction and I'm tired of distractions so let's get this back on track.
This all started with your saying the term "alternating current" made no sense.
I provided definitions of both "current" and "flow" from the Oxford English Dictionary which were quite in keeping with the notion of "alternating current."
Instead of addressing that, you instead went off on some other tangent.
So, no more distractions. Here they are again:
Flow:
"The action or fact of flowing ; movement in a current or stream ; an INSTANCE or MODE of this."
Current:
"That which runs or flows, a stream ; spec. a portion of a body of water, or of air, etc. MOVING IN A DEFINITE DIRECTION."
Again, whether the current is flowing in one direction during one half of the cycle, or in the opposite direction during the other half of the cycle, it is indeed moving in a definite direction. It is an instance of flow. It is a current. An alternating current.
Address this. No more distractions.