As Carl has mentioned before:
Response conductivity is due to target metal type.
Response inductivity is due to target thickness.
Response strength is due to target surface area.
Which means that the inductance is mostly controlled by the skin effect (which depends on target thickness), and resistance is mainly controlled by the conductivity. Both target size and shape have an effect on the inductance and resistance. Therefore, although you only need to have the correct value of tau for modelling purposes, the problem is essentially a matter of figuring out what the tau needs to be. Which is why you'll not see any hard-and-fast numbers published anywhere.
Response conductivity is due to target metal type.
Response inductivity is due to target thickness.
Response strength is due to target surface area.
Which means that the inductance is mostly controlled by the skin effect (which depends on target thickness), and resistance is mainly controlled by the conductivity. Both target size and shape have an effect on the inductance and resistance. Therefore, although you only need to have the correct value of tau for modelling purposes, the problem is essentially a matter of figuring out what the tau needs to be. Which is why you'll not see any hard-and-fast numbers published anywhere.
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