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Old May 27th 04, 02:32 AM
Cecil Moore
 
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Tam/WB2TT wrote:

"Cecil Moore" wrote:
There is no *net* current in the steady state at the input of a
shorted 1/4WL stub. What do you think the current at the short
is? How did that large amount of current get there without flowing?
--

I think it is more instructive to turn on a DC voltage at t=0, rather than a
sine wave. In either case, the voltage builds up step wise, with smaller and
smaller steps until you don't see them.


DC doesn't tell us anything about a 1/4WL shorted stub which is a
network problem, not a circuit problem. The net current at the mouth
of the stub is close to zero while the voltage is at a maximum. At
the short at the other end of the stub, transmission line theory holds.
The voltage is close to zero while the current is at a maximum. Now
exactly how can maximum current be flowing through that short if
no current is flowing into and out of the stub. Hint: it can't!

The forward current and reflected current cancel at the mouth of
the shorted 1/4WL stub. However, they add in-phase 1/4WL away at
the short, maybe to many amps of RF current at the shorted end.
Since there is no physical impedance at the mouth of a stub, nothing
except superposition of forward and reflected waves happens there
and nothing except a virtual impedance exists there. All of the action
is at the shorted end of the stub where there exists 100% reflection.
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp



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