On Thu, 08 Apr 2004 13:31:48 -0500, Cecil Moore
wrote:
Richard Clark wrote:
All of this is commonplace to a practitioner of the art of Optics and
OptoElectronics.
And completely irrelevant to the subject of matches in transmission
lines. Thus, it is obviously only a nit-picking logical diversion on
your part to avoid discussing match points on transmission lines.
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004 18:10:52 GMT, Richard Clark
wrote:
This, then, returns us to the topic of through-glass attachments,
their loss, and the contribution of the layers to reflect (a la glare
suppression) which you re-introduced to this thread, above. [I will
suspend the absurdity of this logic for the moment.]
What is the resonant frequency of this adhesive layer:
in wavelengths, frequency, or color? I think we can all agree
(barring the slipped decimal place) that it is not 2M nor 440 MHz.
I will go one step beyond and ask, if this geometry of attachment is
variable through curvatures (windshield are always curved) what are
the prospects of Newton's Rings offering a variation in that
determination?
These are all garden variety questions that plague newbies to the art.
I gather you have no response to the on-topic question then.
|