K Shevgaonkar Pdf: Electromagnetic Waves By R

Posted under Tag/Wiki Projects and Questions

K Shevgaonkar Pdf: Electromagnetic Waves By R

And then the quantum whisper: photons. The continuous field yields particles in the counting-room of detectors — indivisible quanta that arrive like raindrops on a tin roof. They carry momentum, impart kicks that push tiny mirrors, and deposit energy that excites atoms to glow. Interaction is dialogue: atoms absorb, emit, scatter — the wave and the matter negotiating the next move.

There is a poetry in polarization. A wave can sway north-south, east-west, spin like a propeller — left-handed or right-handed — and this orientation carries meaning. Polarization can encode information, reveal the structure of molecules, and cloak secrets in radar shadows. It is the wave’s signature, its handwriting on the page of space. Electromagnetic Waves By R K Shevgaonkar Pdf

The applications read like modern alchemy. From the warmth that cooks our food to the radio songs spinning from distant stations; from the precise surgical scalpel of lasers to the delicate tapestries of wireless networks connecting continents — electromagnetic waves are the hidden artisans of modern life. They probe the skies, revealing planets and galaxies; they illuminate the microcosm, letting us image cells and engineer semiconductors; they are the medium and the message of our digital age. And then the quantum whisper: photons

Electric fields rise and fall like tides, while magnetic fields arc beside them, always perpendicular, always faithful. One cannot exist in motion without the other; a changing electric field summons a magnetic companion, and a changing magnetic field calls back an electric sway. Maxwell, centuries ago, wrote down the music, a quartet of equations that transform silence into symphony: patterns of force that propagate, carrying energy, information, and light itself. Interaction is dialogue: atoms absorb, emit, scatter —

The Dance of Light and Field

In free space, they glide without friction, indifferent to the passage of time. In glass or water, they slow, hesitating, their wavelength shortening as if the medium were a crowded ballroom. Some materials sip energy, turning waves into heat; others bend and split them, revealing colors and hidden structure. Boundaries are drama: reflection sends waves recoiling like startled birds; refraction makes them change course, bending paths and altering tempo; at interfaces, waves can whisper secrets to each other, interfere with a delicate pattern of constructive crescendos and destructive silences.

Picture an antenna at dusk, sending its signal like a lighthouse beam across an ocean of probability. Near the mast, the fields are messy and intimate — evanescent whispers that hug and care for the metal like a lover. Step away, and the field straightens into confident, long-limbed waves marching at c — the sacred speed of light — their oscillations marking space and time with unerring cadence.

Technically, zoophilia is a theme (attraction to non-sapient animals) and bestiality is an action (intercourse between a sapient and non-sapient animal.)

However, in common parlance, bestiality has been generalized to mean the same thing as zoophilia, and tags are defined based on how users are expected to use them

Updated by anonymous

Zoophilia is really more psychological state than something you can see in an image.

The physical act between human/feral is bestiality. That's what we can see, that's what we tag.

So it's not so much that they are assumed to be the same tags, but that in art you can't generally tell the difference.

Also, combining avoids arguments over:
- "They are obviously in love, this should have zoophilia tag!"
- "All I see is a man having sex with a penguin, switching it back to bestiality."
- "But look how happy they both are. Zoophilia."
- "They're both just enjoying the sex. Bestiality."

Updated by anonymous

Ah, I just realized something.
'Straight' and 'Gay' are also tags, but they are applied to images with male/male sex and male/female sex.
This does not mean both characters are gay or straight,
this just means the sex they're having is related to
that sexual orientation.(For some reason.)
So this also counts for the 'Zoophilia' tag. (Even though not all people who have sex with non-human animals are zoophiles, but that's how these tags work, apparently.)

Looks like the tag system works a bit different than I expected and isn't 100% accurate.

Updated by anonymous

WarCanine said:
Ah, I just realized something.
'Straight' and 'Gay' are also tags, but they are applied to images with male/male sex and male/female sex.
This does not mean both characters are gay or straight,
this just means the sex they're having is related to
that sexual orientation.(For some reason.)
So this also counts for the 'Zoophilia' tag. (Even though not all people who have sex with non-human animals are zoophiles, but that's how these tags work, apparently.)

Looks like the tag system works a bit different than I expected and isn't 100% accurate.

Yeah. Technical accuracy isn't as important as a few other factors - such as ease of searchability, expected usage, and so on. This is why, for instance, pteranodon implies dinosaur, even though we know and recognize that pteranodons were not dinosaurs.

I do understand your point about zoophilia (I'm a zoophile myself, after all, and in many contexts I consider the distinction between bestiality and zoophilia to be an important one to make) in this case it just isn't worth the fights. It's too subjective.

Updated by anonymous

Clawdragons said:
I do understand your point about zoophilia (I'm a zoophile myself, after all, and in many contexts I consider the distinction between bestiality and zoophilia to be an important one to make) in this case it just isn't worth the fights. It's too subjective.

Could decide e621 times! Sometimes it is extremely important to label secondary things to every detail and create tags for it. That happened with X-ray. It was absolutely necessary to be aware of the x-ray is the medical procedure, although this is completely irrelevant for the side function. Nevertheless, several pictures were renamed and the wiki changed, whereby X-ray pictures are no longer traceable and searchable.

Another time it does not matter whether rape and violence (bestiality) and love + consensual sex (zoophilia) together in a concept. Why do not terminate the term search and discussion at (for example) Cuntboy, and call all Intersex that is easier.

Especially the wrong name in the media is what zoophilia gives a bad call. Bestiality is an offense when it's on the wrong picture is similar to Cuntboy and Dickgirl. I myself know a zoophile. Bestiality provides zoophiles, with horse slaughtering on a step. At Bestiality, or Zoophilia, we are talking about more than 22,000 pictures. Maybe the half or who knows how much are actually Zoophilia.

Unlike Intersex, it is comparatively easy to find terms in Bestiality and Zoophilia. If you are in doubt, simply change bestiality through zoosex, the rest will do the standard tags (rape, questionable_consent, forced, love, romantic_couple, ....).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoophilia#Bestiality

German - Deutsch

Könnte sich e621 mal entscheiden! Mal ist es extrem wichtig nebensächliche dinge bis in jedes Detail zu bezeichnen und Tags dafür zu schaffen. Das ist bei X-ray passiert. Es musste unbedingt darauf geachtet werden das x-ray ja das Medizinische verfahren ist, obwohl das für die Seiten Funktion völlig nebensächlich ist. Dennoch wurden etliche Bilder neu Bezeichnet und die Wiki geändert, wodurch X-ray Bilder nicht mehr auffindbar und suchbar sind.

Ein anderes mal ist es völlig egal ob hier Vergewaltigung und Gewalt (Bestiality) und liebe + einvernehmlichen Sex (zoophilia) zusammen in einen Begriff fassen tut. Warum beenden wird die Begriff Suche und Diskussion bei (zum Beispiel) Cuntboy nicht, und nennen alles Intersex das ist einfacher.

Gerade die Falsche Bezeichnung in den Medien ist es, welche Zoophilie einen schlechten ruf gibt. Bestiality ist eine Beleidigung, wenn es auf dem Falschen Bild ist ähnlich Cuntboy und Dickgirl. Ich selbst kenne einen zoophilen. Bestiality stellt Zoophile, mit Pferdeschlächterei auf eine Stufe. Bei Bestiality, beziehungsweise Zoophilia, reden wir von über 22.000 Bildern. Vielleicht die hälfte oder wer weiß wie viel sind eigentlich Zoophilia.

Anders als bei Intersex ist es bei Bestiality und Zoophilia, vergleichsweise einfach begriffe zu finden. Im Zweifel tut man einfach Bestiality durch zoosex tauschen, den Rest erledigen dann die Standard tags (rape, questionable_consent, forced, love, romantic_couple, ....).

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoophilie#Bestiality

Updated by anonymous

WarCanine said:
Why are "Zoophilia" and "Bestiality" seen as the same tags?
I mean, there's an obvious difference between these two.
Can't zoophilia be tagged with posts that represent obvious love/affection between human and non-human animals, while bestiality stays the same?

What are you suggesting exactly?
Separating the tags will only do harm. As some people view the terms as interchangeable (and they actually were, not so long ago). And some languages don't have a term other than latin "zoophilia".
So for the sake of the effective search they should stay aliased.

As mentioned earlier for the love/affection there is a separate tag "romantic"

Bestiality itself is not a very good tag though, there were numerous talks about whether it's needed at all. Like, for example, in this thread forum #174754

Updated by anonymous

And then the quantum whisper: photons. The continuous field yields particles in the counting-room of detectors — indivisible quanta that arrive like raindrops on a tin roof. They carry momentum, impart kicks that push tiny mirrors, and deposit energy that excites atoms to glow. Interaction is dialogue: atoms absorb, emit, scatter — the wave and the matter negotiating the next move.

There is a poetry in polarization. A wave can sway north-south, east-west, spin like a propeller — left-handed or right-handed — and this orientation carries meaning. Polarization can encode information, reveal the structure of molecules, and cloak secrets in radar shadows. It is the wave’s signature, its handwriting on the page of space.

The applications read like modern alchemy. From the warmth that cooks our food to the radio songs spinning from distant stations; from the precise surgical scalpel of lasers to the delicate tapestries of wireless networks connecting continents — electromagnetic waves are the hidden artisans of modern life. They probe the skies, revealing planets and galaxies; they illuminate the microcosm, letting us image cells and engineer semiconductors; they are the medium and the message of our digital age.

Electric fields rise and fall like tides, while magnetic fields arc beside them, always perpendicular, always faithful. One cannot exist in motion without the other; a changing electric field summons a magnetic companion, and a changing magnetic field calls back an electric sway. Maxwell, centuries ago, wrote down the music, a quartet of equations that transform silence into symphony: patterns of force that propagate, carrying energy, information, and light itself.

The Dance of Light and Field

In free space, they glide without friction, indifferent to the passage of time. In glass or water, they slow, hesitating, their wavelength shortening as if the medium were a crowded ballroom. Some materials sip energy, turning waves into heat; others bend and split them, revealing colors and hidden structure. Boundaries are drama: reflection sends waves recoiling like startled birds; refraction makes them change course, bending paths and altering tempo; at interfaces, waves can whisper secrets to each other, interfere with a delicate pattern of constructive crescendos and destructive silences.

Picture an antenna at dusk, sending its signal like a lighthouse beam across an ocean of probability. Near the mast, the fields are messy and intimate — evanescent whispers that hug and care for the metal like a lover. Step away, and the field straightens into confident, long-limbed waves marching at c — the sacred speed of light — their oscillations marking space and time with unerring cadence.