This guy probably single-handedly busted so much confusion about em waves. Cannot tell you how confused I was until he made this beautiful video. You can tell he’s got a good heart too. I just wish he would put all his videos into one UA-cam channel, not spread out over 4 different UA-cam channels.
Although Bob is still a dik for not consolidating everything into a single UA-cam channel. Guys got four different UA-cam channels for electronics information tech, relativity etc!
Thank you. Using only a whiteboard and stick figure drawings you helped me visualize expanding EM "bubbles". Perhaps you might also post a simple demo using an oscilloscope probe as a dipole antenna showing how "empty" space really is filled with moving voltage bubbles.
17:42 Some fantastic vaporwave art :) Thanks for the fantastic explanation Bob! I've recently tried getting in to amateur radio and very hard to build a mental model about these waves. Your diagram of the person next to giant bubble cross sections brought out a primal fear of why I'd never want to see these waves.
This guy probably single-handedly busted so much confusion about em waves. Cannot tell you how confused I was until he made this beautiful video. You can tell he’s got a good heart too. I just wish he would put all his videos into one UA-cam channel, not spread out over 4 different UA-cam channels.
Although Bob is still a dik for not consolidating everything into a single UA-cam channel. Guys got four different UA-cam channels for electronics information tech, relativity etc!
Sir, many many thanks for videos 🎉🎉
Thank you. Using only a whiteboard and stick figure drawings you helped me visualize expanding EM "bubbles". Perhaps you might also post a simple demo using an oscilloscope probe as a dipole antenna showing how "empty" space really is filled with moving voltage bubbles.
Your videos are priceless!
17:42 Some fantastic vaporwave art :)
Thanks for the fantastic explanation Bob! I've recently tried getting in to amateur radio and very hard to build a mental model about these waves.
Your diagram of the person next to giant bubble cross sections brought out a primal fear of why I'd never want to see these waves.
Actually you should consider yourself lucky that you can see them. It's called light. Light is a electromagnetic wave.
@@mikesradiorepair I was talking about radio waves :)
You said there is no magnetic field exist. So how do you explain the magnetic component of electromagnetic waves?
Thanks very much for the difficult subject made easy