Cecil Moore wrote:
In a transmission line with reflections, antiresonance is
indeed plus or minus 90 degrees from resonance and "never
the twain shall meet". Resonance and antiresonance cannot,
by definition, occur at the same point, i.e. if a point
is antiresonant, it cannot, by definition, be resonant.
One more thought: In a transmission line with reflections,
a voltage node is located at a point of resonance. A voltage
anti-node is located at a point of anti-resonance. Makes
perfect sense to me.
--
73, Cecil
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