Difference between revisions of "Main Page/The Rota's Effect"

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'''''Check by yourself !''''' What we call the Rota's effect is not the well known background noise, neither the usual clicks produced when connecting/disconnecting the headset to an antenna: it is the fact that under certain condition, the clicks occur when then should not.
 
'''''Check by yourself !''''' What we call the Rota's effect is not the well known background noise, neither the usual clicks produced when connecting/disconnecting the headset to an antenna: it is the fact that under certain condition, the clicks occur when then should not.
  
*;Experience 1: A very simple experiment to detect the Rota's effect
+
*Experiment 1 [[Listening to the Rota's effect]]
 
+
*Experiment 2 [[The Rota's Effect | atmospherics effect on various  metals]]
*;Experience 2: Comparing atmospherics effect on various  metals
 

Revision as of 00:27, 12 August 2006

A00028 Iron.jpg
Iron
A00025 Cuivre.jpg
Copper
A00026 Silver.jpg
Silver
A00027 Carbon.jpg
Carbon

Louis Rota did not use any electronic equipment, only a stopwatch and a hight impedance headset connected to a ground or/and aerial antenna network. He claimed that the atmospherics or statics in radio sets was due to the metals of the radio set and antennae responding to the "Universal Currents". Using a tape recorder and an oscillospe, Mike Watson was able to compared the effects of the atmospheric electromagnetic signals on several metals. Are these variation nothing but a ramdom phenomena totaly explicable with with physcal properties of the metal?

Check by yourself ! What we call the Rota's effect is not the well known background noise, neither the usual clicks produced when connecting/disconnecting the headset to an antenna: it is the fact that under certain condition, the clicks occur when then should not.