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Wikipedia:Requests for deletion/Requests/2024/Ambipolar electric field

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Ambipolar electric field

Ambipolar electric field (edit · talk · history · links · watch · logs · delete) · close request

Fr33kman has nominated this page for deletion for the reason: Complex wording. fr33kman 04:08, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Please discuss this request below, but keep in mind that you shouldn't vote on everything and that there may be options other than "keep" or "delete", such as merging.

Discussion

  •  Keep It's not really more complex than a lot of the science articles here. I guess people disagree whether it's possible to explain science subjects well using just Basic English words, but as long as an average person can generally understand it, that meets part of this project's goal. That needs a little more work here, but it's closer than the enwiki version. Batrachoseps (talk) 04:15, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep I wrote this article. If you really think the wording is to difficult, then that is reason to simplify it, not erase it.Kdammers (talk) 05:10, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • If not ... , then Delete - is what i'm leaning toward.

    The English-wiki article is 'drifting alone, on the seas'; All the new work (there), is being done on (their) "Polar wind" (wiki-article).

    If our article were to say: " Ambipolar electric field is (an important idea or) key element of a theory about an electric field which surrounds the planet.

    [End of lede:] This (thought-of or imagined) Ambipolar electric field would be like other ambipolar electric fields, in that they are a kind of electric field called polarized electric field.

    Voltage measurements done from a rocket traveling thru Space:

    Various voltage measurements were done, during a rocket-flight in 2022. What is thought to be a kind of polarization electric field, an ambipolar electric field, seems to have been measured. Later measurements, if even made, have not been published (as of 2024's third quarter).

    The field was measured in 2022 by a sounding rocket launched from Svalbard. This NASA mission was called Endurance. "[1]

    Further comment: If the article says the above (, and little else), then that is about where one should be.--If our "Polar wind" article gets updated, then that is also fine.--Good luck (while i fix other articles). 2001:2020:32F:EA20:E848:467B:C80:4CCB (talk) 22:05, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

This request is due to close on 04:08, 23 September 2024 (UTC), seven days after it was filed, although it may be closed earlier at the discretion of an administrator.

  1. Cite error: The named reference NASA was used but no text was provided for refs named (see the help page).