Hi again,
MrRB:
Well as i outlined several times there are different forums that will take a different view. The physical view is that there is no current flow THROUGH the capacitor, while the circuit theory view is that current is *assumed* to go through the capacitor. Note the word 'assumed'.
Let me restate where the discussion has taken us.
First, people were saying that "current flows through a capacitor", and i had said that in circuit theory you can assume that to make the equations work easier, but i also said that in the bottom line physical view that no current flows through the capacitor. We then divided the 'current' into two 'types', where one was the conduction current and the other was the 'displacement current'. We then went on to discover that the conduction current does not make it through the capacitor, so that leaves the displacement current. We then started to argue if the displacement current is real or not. Brownout said that he cant see something that is not real having a real effect.
So you see we are really at the place where we want to discover if the displacement current is a real current or just a byproduct of an equation. We know that we can 'assume' that current flows through the cap just for computational purposes, so we shouldnt have to talk about that anymore. As long as we remember that that is not what is really happening inside the capacitor.
Now the only argument left is about the displacement current, is it real or not. But there is also a side discussion to this, and that is even if it is real (somehow in some way) it has to be something that is not actually conducting because if there was any conduction it would consume power, but in any case we cant simply state that "current flows through a capacitor" because that would be very misleading. In the circuit theory case, yes, but not in the physical case. Circuit theory isnt always concerned with the internal operation of a device, while physics theory often is. So at the very least, we'd have to divide the discussion into two sections:
1. Circuit theory, and
2. Physics theory
There's no way around this.
So back to the displacement current....is it real or not?
When we look at the Maxwell equation (again) we see that it is an equation for calculating the B field. Note that it is not an equation for current. It takes arguments of current and change of E flux, and spits out B. That's because the whole problem began when there was an 'extra' amount of B field without any conduction current flowing. Hence we can calculate the extra B field knowing the change in E flux. NOTE that we dont even have to know what the 'displacement current' is, but we can still calculate the field, which is what we wanted to do in the first place. The units happen to come out to units of amps AFTER you multiply the change in E flux by a constant, but that's just units and units can be deceiving. I was trying to illustrate this with the water and pipes experiment, where the volumetric flow would have to have been in units of cubic meters per second (or similar). Another example, a little less direct, is in the result to a problem that comes out to "square inches per inch". I didnt see any comments yet on that BTW (he he) but sometimes the units will resolve into units of simply "inches" but other times we cant do that, we have to leave the units in "square inches per inch" even though it doesnt appear to make sense at first.
So anyway let me get back to the displacement current more directly....
We want to calculate the extra B, so we measure the current and we measure the change in E field, and there we go, we can calculate the B field. Note we dont measure the so called 'displacement current' now do we? Why not? If we want to calculate the B field then how in the world are we going to measure the displacement current in order to get the answer? It's simple, we dont. In other words, the displacement current doesnt do us any good. It doesnt really help to know that we have "I amps" of displacement current because who cares? The only people who care are those that would like to know if we can say that "current flows through a capacitor" or not. If the displacement current is real then there may be a desire to state that current flows through a capacitor, but think about what we would be saying. We'd have to skip all the details of how different this new type of current (if we can even call it that) is, and that would be misleading. So i guess the best thing to state then is current does not flow through a capacitor, but there's a fictitious current that is sometimes talked about that is almost equivalent to a current when it comes to the B field. Even that isnt perfect though.
So if you want to tell someone that current flows through a capacitor, then you should also explain the details of how whatever it is between the plates is not the same as what is in the wire. It wasnt called "displacement current" because it was the same thing as what was happening inside the wire leading to the capacitor, if it was it would have been called "capacitor current".
On the lighter side of things...
Anyone ever play that game "Indiana Jones and the Temple of (something)"? That's where the guy you maneuver around sometimes has to jump over three alligators all with their mouths wide open and snapping. That guy reminds me of an electron trying to jump across the mote (vacuum) over the hungry alligators. Does he ever make it to the other side?
