Cecil, 
 
You completely ducked the question. How did those waves get there in the 
first place? Hint: there are no laws for conservation of waves or 
continuity of waves. 
 
It is easy to set up a problem with physically unrealizable inputs. It 
is pointless to try to solve such a problem, however. 
 
We've been around this track a couple of times before. Neither of us has 
changed. 
 
Bye. 
 
73, 
Gene 
W4SZ 
 
Cecil Moore wrote: 
 Gene Fuller wrote: 
 
 Cecil, 
 
 Nice try. 
 
 You first. 
 
 Describe how you set up this coherent wave/anti-wave pair that happily 
 travel together for some indeterminate distance. Then I will describe 
 what happens when at some arbitrary point and time they decide to 
 annihilate. 
 
 
 Sure, here's the two coherent reflected waves that cancel at a 
 Z0-matched impedance discontinuity in a transmission line. 
 
 b1 = s11*a1 + s12*a2 = 0 
 
 I'm sure you recognize the S-parameter equation for the reflected 
 voltage flowing toward the source which is the phasor sum of two 
 other reflected voltages. 
 
 They don't travel together for some indeterminate distance. They 
 are cancelled within the first dl and dt. And they don't annihilate. 
 They simply cancel in the rearward direction. 
 
 Incidentally, if you square both sides of the equation you get 
 
  b1^2 = s11^2*a1^2  + s12^2*a2^2      + 2*s11*a1*s12*a2 
 
 Pref1 = rho^2*Pfor1 + (1-rho^2)*Pref2 + interference 
 
 The forward voltage equation toward the load is  b2 = s21*a1 + s22*a2 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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