Anapole: Difference between revisions

From LENR
(Rewrite seed page from fact bullets into natural wiki prose (via update-page on MediaWiki MCP Server))
(Replace generic section heading with topic-specific heading (via update-page on MediaWiki MCP Server))
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Anapole is a concept used in some LENR-related interpretations of non-radiating electromagnetic configurations.
Anapole is a concept used in some LENR-related interpretations of non-radiating electromagnetic configurations.


==LENR context==
==Electromagnetic interpretation==
 
In electromagnetic theory, an anapole is commonly associated with non-radiating arrangements of currents and fields. LENR-related interpretations compare this idea with toroidal dipoles, poloidal currents, scalar and vector potentials, and regions where ordinary electric and magnetic fields are claimed to cancel or become difficult to detect.
In electromagnetic theory, an anapole is commonly associated with non-radiating arrangements of currents and fields. LENR-related interpretations compare this idea with toroidal dipoles, poloidal currents, scalar and vector potentials, and regions where ordinary electric and magnetic fields are claimed to cancel or become difficult to detect.



Latest revision as of 02:59, 4 June 2026

Anapole is a concept used in some LENR-related interpretations of non-radiating electromagnetic configurations.

Electromagnetic interpretation

In electromagnetic theory, an anapole is commonly associated with non-radiating arrangements of currents and fields. LENR-related interpretations compare this idea with toroidal dipoles, poloidal currents, scalar and vector potentials, and regions where ordinary electric and magnetic fields are claimed to cancel or become difficult to detect.

The concept is used here as a bridge between reports of compact plasma structures, coherent matter, and older discussions of EVs or exotic vacuum objects. It should be presented carefully: anapole physics is a real theoretical topic, while its application to LENR observations remains interpretive.

Related topics

Source