Faraday Cage
A Faraday cage is a grounded, conductive mesh enclosure used to block wireless transmissions into or out of a space. Within the maths, the same arrangement is commonly called a “Saunt Bucker’s Basket,” honoring Saunt Bucker.
Practical use has been demonstrated by avout who lined walls and floors with conductive wire mesh—such as animal‑fencing—and tied it to ground, enveloping a room so that body transmitters and other wireless devices could not communicate beyond its bounds. This provided temporary informational privacy during a tense exchange with outsiders, and a second individual was kept in a separate, smaller basket for the same purpose.
Characteristics and limitations: - Works by creating a continuous conductive shell connected to ground; effectiveness depends on coverage and grounding quality. - Blocks wireless signaling; it does not impede sound or other direct physical channels.
Terminology: - In-maths usage: “Saunt Bucker’s Basket.” - Term used by a visiting outsider: “Faraday cage.”
A grounded conductive enclosure that blocks wireless signals from entering or leaving a space; known among avout as "Saunt Bucker’s Basket" and by visitors as a "Faraday cage".
Part 10: Messal - Chapter 45: Syntactic Faculties
Faraday cage