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A 'Leyden Jar' Capacitor, with a difference??

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GlennSprigg:
We here all do/should know about the ubiquitous 'Leyden Jar', as described in...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyden_jar

However, I just watched an old youtube video with Professor Julius Sumner Miller, where he demonstrated a physical
construction of one, using 2 aluminium cans and a glass jar stacked together. OK, that sounds good... He then charged
one of the 'plates' with high voltage, and demonstrated a strong discharge spark between the 2 metal components. OK.

He then repeated this, but before discharging it, he pulled it all apart, and 'grounded' all the parts, including touching the
metal parts together, before re-assembling it all with the glass jar. He then demonstrated by connecting the 2 metal parts
with a spark,that the 'charge' was still there??!!  He has a habit of leaving 'experiments' for people to work out why, by
themselves!... It has me confused. Actually, his whole video is interesting, but the point I mention starts here...

https://youtu.be/4wa8IKMYwK8?t=358

Gyro:
Are you asking for the answer?

wraper:

--- Quote ---This demonstration appears to suggest that capacitors store their charge inside their dielectric. This theory was taught throughout the 1800s. However, this phenomenon is a special effect caused by the high voltage on the Leyden jar. In the dissectible Leyden jar, charge is transferred to the surface of the glass cup by corona discharge when the jar is disassembled; this is the source of the residual charge after the jar is reassembled. Handling the cup while disassembled does not provide enough contact to remove all the surface charge. Soda glass is hygroscopic and forms a partially conductive coating on its surface, which holds the charge. Addenbrooke (1922) found that in a dissectible jar made of paraffin wax, or glass baked to remove moisture, the charge remained on the metal plates. Zeleny (1944) confirmed these results and observed the corona charge transfer.
--- End quote ---
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyden_jar

GlennSprigg:

--- Quote from: Gyro on January 10, 2021, 02:40:09 pm ---Are you asking for the answer?

--- End quote ---

Sorry for any ambiguity mate. Not really requesting an answer as such, but was more a "Food for Thought"  :)
It seems that many people have varying opinions about what is/may be going on. 'wraper' did hit on the general
consensus.  I did actually have my own ideas, (before reading that myself), that if this 'magical' charge is no longer
in the metal components, then the only thing left is the Dielectric! ??  Didn't seem right, but I further imagined that
I can't imagine that working if the 'dielectric' was say air, or a vacuum, so it must require a SOLID Dielectric !...  :phew:

I still hadn't worked out exactly how though prior to that, but I was reminded of a statement by the fictional
Sherlock Holmes  who purportedly said... "When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however
improbable, must be the truth".  Maybe these words from the Author, (Arthur Conan Doyle) are wize!!!   :-+

Gyro:
Yes, you're right, this demonstration can only apply to solid dielectrics. With air and vacuum capacitors, the charge is held on the electrodes themselves. I doubt you would see a capacitance change in an air dielectric capacitor exposed to air movement (although I've never tried it). With vacuum capacitors, there is no dielectric to isolate anyway.

No doubt there would have been some very small charge on the metal cans in the demonstration, but far too low to perceive and completely swamped by the magnitude of the charge stored in the solid dielectric jar.

I guess the best demonstration of charge with a non-solid dielectric [Edit: No dielectric] was the repeated precautionary grounding of the dome on the Van De Graaff generator.


P.S. The original  Electrophorus is a useful demonstration of building up a charge in a solid dielectric without having an electrode (and then transferring it to an isolated metallic electrode)   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrophorus

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