davenn said:
[1] that goes against everything else
And that's why I spent several hours researching this yesterday, as I had a hard time believing it myself.
[2] the higher conductivity of humid air is why you DONT get a problem with electrostatic discharge during the summer that you do on dry winter days
My only answer to this, is that there is another mechanism that causes this effect.
[3] The higher conductivity also reduces coronal discharge problems associated with very high electric and electrostatic fields
This is probably caused by yet another mechanism.
[4] you will find dozens of references on the net to back that up.
I couldn't find any. But I wasn't looking for "coronal discharges" specifically.
But I did search around the forum to see if a similar question had been asked, and I found:
How does humidity affect conductivity of air?
Where I did not find an answer.
But berkeman asked; "
Do you find some graphs when you Google the subject?"
Which prompted me to look for graphs, and I could only one, on the document I referenced:
The graph requires a bit of head scratching, but it can plainly be seen that as humidity goes up, conductivity goes down.
My next quest is: "How on Earth does one measure pico(?)amps?
[5] And surely you must have noticed a difference between static discharges in winter vs summer ??
Dave
Yes, but see my answer to [2] above.
Bullet point [1-5] numbering is mine, as this is complicated.
My head almost exploded trying to figure this out.
ps. As I've pointed out before, I engage in threads, either to learn or to teach. This revelation, if true, really boogers up a hypothesis of mine from a few years ago regarding
Is fire a plasma?
So other questions are:
"How does minor ionization of air relate to plasma conductivity?"
"Should we introduce how smoke detectors work?"
"Does air containing hard-boiled water vapor contain more or less ions than evaporated hot water vapor?"