Please disprove this for me (science/electricity related.)

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
0
I have a card here from a game called Mind Trap that poses this problem:

Shady was his invention to a 'Birds Unlimited' convention. He explained that he developed a special insulation for high powered electrical lines. The insulation is guaranteed to save thousands of birds who unwittingly land on the lines and are electrocuted each year. Shady claimed that with all the birds saved,the annual summer mosquito problem would practically disappear. As Shady was appealing for donations, Captain Frank, an avid bird lover, stood up and told Shady to peddle his line elsewhere. What was wrong with Shady's claim?

It then proceeds to produce this pile of crap as an answer:
High powered electrical lines have such a strong magnetic field that is virtually impossible for birds to land on them. The magnetic field will actually repel the birds.

I want to be able to provide concrete evidence that this answer is plain wrong. The simple fact that birds aren't magnetic doesn't seem to be enough.
 

sillymofo

Banned
Aug 11, 2003
5,817
2
0
Take camera, go outside, wait for birds to land on powerlines, take pictures, print out.... whaaala... Proof.

EDIT: Unless it's Big Bertha, which can keep one foot on each line.
 

MikeMike

Lifer
Feb 6, 2000
45,885
66
91
i dont know the magnetic properties of a bird.

and they are talking about the 10K volt high tension lines i believe.

MIKE
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126
Ummm...maybe if they have about 10,000% of the USDA of their iron intake a day.
 

Shivatron

Senior member
Apr 9, 2003
342
0
0
Originally posted by: Anubis
the birds arnt grounded - they dont get zapped

This is, of course, the simplest (and thus via Occam's Razor, the correct ;)) answer. As for magnetic fields, I have no idea.
 

warcrow

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
11,078
11
81
Thye must be talking about the very HIGH powered lines (10K volts), b/c I see it almost everyday.


BTW, where is Doom 3?
 

Anubis

No Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
78,712
427
126
tbqhwy.com
Originally posted by: Atticu5
Originally posted by: Anubis
the birds arnt grounded - they dont get zapped

This is, of course, the simplest (and thus via Occam's Razor, the correct ;)) answer. As for magnetic fields, I have no idea.

neither do I and im a physics major, ive never heard it explained that the mag field repells them, but im sure it could
 

Ameesh

Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
23,686
1
0
Originally posted by: notfred
I have a card here from a game called Mind Trap that poses this problem:

Shady was his invention to a 'Birds Unlimited' convention. He explained that he developed a special insulation for high powered electrical lines. The insulation is guaranteed to save thousands of birds who unwittingly land on the lines and are electrocuted each year. Shady claimed that with all the birds saved,the annual summer mosquito problem would practically disappear. As Shady was appealing for donations, Captain Frank, an avid bird lover, stood up and told Shady to peddle his line elsewhere. What was wrong with Shady's claim?

It then proceeds to produce this pile of crap as an answer:
High powered electrical lines have such a strong magnetic field that is virtually impossible for birds to land on them. The magnetic field will actually repel the birds.

I want to be able to provide concrete evidence that this answer is plain wrong. The simple fact that birds aren't magnetic doesn't seem to be enough.


a birds sense of direction is governed by magnetic fields. As an electric current flows throw a wire a magentic field is generated (vice versa is also true in case you are wondering).

Imagine a powerline in your head , now take your right hand and stick your thumb out in the way the current is travvelling and curl your fingers into a fist, the way your fingers are moving is the way the magentic field will be generated. Since a powerline has a lot of current going through it it will really fvck with a birds balance, but i believe you are getting confused with a bird sitting on a telephone wire vs a power line. A telephone line wont have nearly as much current flowing through it.

-Ameesh
 

jyates

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2001
3,847
0
76
In order to get zapped the birds would have to be touching 2 wires at the same time.
Just touching 1 wire when you aren't grounded isn't going to do anything.
 

gururu

Platinum Member
Jul 16, 2002
2,402
0
0
Originally posted by: jyates
In order to get zapped the birds would have to be touching 2 wires at the same time.
Just touching 1 wire when you aren't grounded isn't going to do anything.


that's not too uncommon, particularly for large birds.
 

MikeMike

Lifer
Feb 6, 2000
45,885
66
91
Originally posted by: Ameesh
Originally posted by: notfred
I have a card here from a game called Mind Trap that poses this problem:

Shady was his invention to a 'Birds Unlimited' convention. He explained that he developed a special insulation for high powered electrical lines. The insulation is guaranteed to save thousands of birds who unwittingly land on the lines and are electrocuted each year. Shady claimed that with all the birds saved,the annual summer mosquito problem would practically disappear. As Shady was appealing for donations, Captain Frank, an avid bird lover, stood up and told Shady to peddle his line elsewhere. What was wrong with Shady's claim?

It then proceeds to produce this pile of crap as an answer:
High powered electrical lines have such a strong magnetic field that is virtually impossible for birds to land on them. The magnetic field will actually repel the birds.

I want to be able to provide concrete evidence that this answer is plain wrong. The simple fact that birds aren't magnetic doesn't seem to be enough.


a birds sense of direction is governed by magnetic fields. As an electric current flows throw a wire a magentic field is generated (vice versa is also true in case you are wondering).

Imagine a powerline in your head , now take your right hand and stick your thumb out in the way the current is travvelling and curl your fingers into a fist, the way your fingers are moving is the way the magentic field will be generated. Since a powerline has a lot of current going through it it will really fvck with a birds balance, but i believe you are getting confused with a bird sitting on a telephone wire vs a power line. A telephone line wont have nearly as much current flowing through it.

-Ameesh


yep, right hand rule for magnetic fields.

that would really fvck with a bird wouldnt it, i dont recall seeing any birds on high tension lines, hmm, ill have to look.

MIKE
 

beer

Lifer
Jun 27, 2000
11,169
1
0
Most materials on the earth have the same relative permeabaility of magnetic fields. That is, carbon, hydrogen, water, plastics, wood, etc, all allow magnetic fields to pass through with the same attenuation as that of a perfect vacuum, or air. The exceptions, of course, are the ferromagnetics, of which Iron is the only common one. Most materials have different relative permittieties of electric fields. Carbon, plastics, etc, insulate electric fields extremely well but do nothing to stop magnetic fields.

I suppose this would work if you had a layer of high electrical permitivity, a layer of high magnetic permeability, and then another layer of high electrical permitivity. That way you could attenuate both signals relatively fast. It'd be heavy though!
 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
50,419
8
81
I have never heard that one.

But now that I think about it, I have never seen a bird near a high tension line.

They carry several orders of magnitude more energy than the ones on the poles in your neighborhood.
 

Howard

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
47,982
11
81
Originally posted by: beer
Most materials on the earth have the same relative permeabaility of magnetic fields. That is, carbon, hydrogen, water, plastics, wood, etc, all allow magnetic fields to pass through with the same attenuation as that of a perfect vacuum, or air. The exceptions, of course, are the ferromagnetics, of which Iron is the only common one. Most materials have different relative permittieties of electric fields. Carbon, plastics, etc, insulate electric fields extremely well but do nothing to stop magnetic fields.

I suppose this would work if you had a layer of high electrical permitivity, a layer of high magnetic permeability, and then another layer of high electrical permitivity. That way you could attenuate both signals relatively fast. It'd be heavy though!
There's a difference between diamagnetism and paramagnetism.
 

beer

Lifer
Jun 27, 2000
11,169
1
0
Originally posted by: Howard
Originally posted by: beer
Most materials on the earth have the same relative permeabaility of magnetic fields. That is, carbon, hydrogen, water, plastics, wood, etc, all allow magnetic fields to pass through with the same attenuation as that of a perfect vacuum, or air. The exceptions, of course, are the ferromagnetics, of which Iron is the only common one. Most materials have different relative permittieties of electric fields. Carbon, plastics, etc, insulate electric fields extremely well but do nothing to stop magnetic fields.

I suppose this would work if you had a layer of high electrical permitivity, a layer of high magnetic permeability, and then another layer of high electrical permitivity. That way you could attenuate both signals relatively fast. It'd be heavy though!
There's a difference between diamagnetism and paramagnetism.

Eh, -isms of e/m aren't my thing, I made a C in the class. But the priniciple still stands I think even if I used the wrong word, there aren't many high perm materials out ther.
 

Atomicus

Banned
May 20, 2004
5,192
0
0
On normal powerlines, the birds can land on the wire, but don't actually touch. Why? Because they do generate a repulsive force, however, it is only enough to repel the bird's feet a small distance from the wire, this the feet can grasp this "invisible" wire which is repelling. You should see this pretty common in your own yard where there are power lines. Trust me, I'm an environmental engineer and I've read about it.

As for high powered electrical lines, the game's solution is correct. If you've payed attention in your college physics class, magnetic flux goes through most objects, including insulation since its not a transfer of electrons but an invisible force. Just like how even extreme levels of voltage can penetrate insulation, so can a magnetic field actually repel.

I own a copy of Mind Trap and I've never seen an answer wrong before.
 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Originally posted by: Atomicus
On normal powerlines, the birds can land on the wire, but don't actually touch. Why? Because they do generate a repulsive force, however, it is only enough to repel the bird's feet a small distance from the wire, this the feet can grasp this "invisible" wire which is repelling. You should see this pretty common in your own yard where there are power lines. Trust me, I'm an environmental engineer and I've read about it.

If that were the case, wouldn't the repulsion make the wire "slippery", so that birds couldn't keep their balance?

I dunno...I don't buy it. Few things are repelled by magnetism, and those things that are usually are repelled by such a small amount we don't even notice.

Hey, if I'm wrong though feel free to let me know. Always willing to learn something new.
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Originally posted by: Ymmy
Originally posted by: SplinterDB
Originally posted by: Yossarian
Originally posted by: Anubis
the birds arnt grounded - they dont get zapped

yes that is correct.

Agreed but to slow :(

Correct

I saw something on the history channel about the guys who work on high tension power lines... apparantly they can mess you up pretty badly even if you're not grounded, and even if you don't touch them.
 

Atomicus

Banned
May 20, 2004
5,192
0
0
Like I said, look at the birds on regular power lines that runs with your telephone lines etc. The grip wouldn't be slippery because the shape of the claw doesn't allow for slippage. A semi-circular arc clamping on a repulsive force shaped like a rod will not allow for slippage (omg.. i wish i could draw a FBD)

The proof is there, when its morning, go outside and look at the birds. They can grasp the wires; you cannot.