Inductive capacitance.
I just read that "Negative Henries" is capacitance. There is no such thing as "Inductive Capacitance"; A measure of the electrical charge an inductor can store should be evaluated in terms of inductance and magnetic field strength, not Farads and voltage.
These terms are not really technically inter-changeable, but are in common use. Dr. Dragone measured the electrical power stored in a permanent magnet by equaling the field strength with an electro-magnet and multiplying it's power consumption by the lifetime of the permanent magnet. The result is in megawatts of (Capacitence)?
Negative Henries have to be measured in units of magnet strength, not storage of electrical charge. It's very wrong and confusing for people to refer to NMH's in terms of electrical charge capacitance, and not Gauss Oersted's
I just read that "Negative Henries" is capacitance. There is no such thing as "Inductive Capacitance"; A measure of the electrical charge an inductor can store should be evaluated in terms of inductance and magnetic field strength, not Farads and voltage.
These terms are not really technically inter-changeable, but are in common use. Dr. Dragone measured the electrical power stored in a permanent magnet by equaling the field strength with an electro-magnet and multiplying it's power consumption by the lifetime of the permanent magnet. The result is in megawatts of (Capacitence)?
Negative Henries have to be measured in units of magnet strength, not storage of electrical charge. It's very wrong and confusing for people to refer to NMH's in terms of electrical charge capacitance, and not Gauss Oersted's
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