Do you have any coments on the measurement uncertainty in that number?
I dont know how good his 20 GHz scope is. As u can see i got my 85 ps by drawing intersecting lines. It might be all ok to better than 5%, but really u would have to do dozens of tests using different setups & gaps etc etc etc to get a feel for what was doing what.I would love to get my amateur hands on a 20 GHz scope. I did contact my local university, but no reply yet.
And you're confident that there's no classical EM explanation for what's contained in those scope traces?
I was thinking on the lines of what experiments you could do to examine the effects of surface finish on the speed of propagation along a wire. Would you anticipate any noticeable effects for a copper wire with varying degrees of surface roughness, including nickel plated, tin plated, and kapton insulated? Would any effects be related to any established material properties?
The old (electron drift inside a wire) electricity can't explain how electricity is so fast along a wire.
And the Poynting Field version can't explain how electricity is slowed by a thin coat of insulation on a wire.
Classical em radiation might answer much of what we see in traces. For example almost every possible theory would say that Veritasium's bulb might feel a signal at 1/c seconds. It would be difficult to come up with a theory that didn’t.
And it appears that lumped element TL models can explain some of what we see in traces.
I think that my new (electon) electricity might explain traces that others can't.
A lot of professors are happy to say that electricity is due to photons near a wire. But no-one is happy with my photons (electons) hugging a wire, even though electons tick the above 2 boxes (& nothing else comes close).
I reckon that the best experiment would be the simple speed of electricity along a threaded bar.
I doubt that the kind of metal would make much difference, eg steel copper aluminium, zinc plated nickel plated etc.
But a plastic coating would of course slow the electricity to say 2c/3.
I don’t know how u could make much scientific sense out of surface roughness, other than by using screw thread.
Very fine screw, medium screw, & very course screw. Whitworth thread. Bar thread.
Anyhow if i had a scope then the screw-thread test is what i would do first.