Drakkith said:
A "high electric field" would produce a high voltage. Voltage is simply a measure of the difference in electric potential between two points.
It seems to me that conceptually, voltage is less important than electric field:
E=\rho j
Ed=\rho jd=\rho jd \frac{A}{A}= \frac{\rho d}{A}(jA)=RI=V
So while voltage is proportional to distance, so is resistance, so distance shouldn't matter in determining the current.
Sunlight is composed of photons. Each photon can only excite an individual particle to a certain amount depending on the frequency. Most of them simply cause heat to be generated, nothing else.
Assuming humans are drinking water, the conductivity of drinking water is 10
-2 according to Wikipedia, so the current density due to the sun would be 6.5 amps per square meter since the E-field is 650 V/m. You are correct that we experience only Ohmnic heating due to the sun (our bodies don't store electromagnetic energy, so if energy from the sun disappears into us, it has to be Ohmnic heating), so does this mean 6.5 amps per square meter is not deadly? According to this thread, 100 mA is deadly, so if the heart were (1/65) square meters in size, the sun would be deadly?
The resistance of the skin is finite and whether in a DC current or AC current it usually only matters what the voltage is. Extremely high frequencies may act slightly different, but I wouldn't go putting my hand on something exposed at that frequency.
For a dielectric, an electric field creates a polarization. A rapidly oscillating electric field causes the polarization to oscillate, so that the electrons are now oscillating. The oscillations of these electrons constitutes a current, and the strength of the oscillation should be proportional to the frequency of the incoming wave.
A power line isn't charged like you might put a charge on an electrode. The voltage goes into causing a current flow. Unless you touch the exposed wire there won't be a potential difference because of the huge resistance of the dielectric surrounding the cable and because of the air.
I think this is the reason I've got it wrong. You need to have charge flow through you, or your body will neutralize the fields in the same way a conductor neutralizes fields. So the high resistance between the hot wire, air, you, and the ground will prevent continuous current flow.