OK, I can't help but step in here! Back in 2005, I started asking "what's the origin of the voltage that must exist to push current around a so-called "ground loop?" I asked my smartest colleagues and never got an answer that was consistent with real-world measurements. But I had a hunch and did some table-top experiments to confirm that my theory was right. In 2010, I designed a controlled experiment and collaborated with a young EE friend with math skills fresh from college to predict my results using Maxwell's equations. I published the results in a 2011 AES paper "Ground Loops: the Rest of the Story". I've attached a couple of PowerPoint slides I use in my seminars to explain where this voltage source is. It's not "just there" as most people assume. The paper explains how the geometry of the current-carrying conductors in the premises wiring magnetically induces EMI voltage into the ground/PE conductor. And, because the voltage is proportional to the rate-of-change of the current (Faraday's law) in the load conductors, the voltages get higher with frequency. This also explains why we usually hear "buzz" rather than "hum" - and why phase-control light dimmers are such a nightmarish problem for noise. It also shows why tightly twisting the current-carrying conductors before they're pulled into conduit can reduce the inducted voltage by 1000:1 (60 dB) or more. This twisted L-N branch circuit technique has been installed in several large venues including the Disney concert hall in Los Angeles and the Bing auditorium at Stanford University. The folks who subsequently installed sound systems in these venues were amazed that they had absolutely no system noise right from the start. Anyone interested in the AES paper can drop me a line at [email protected] or, if you're an AES member, you can download it for free at the www.aes.org.