Richard Harrison wrote:
"Create a reflected wave near the load that is equal in magnitude but
opposite in phase from the wave reflected by the load; in this way the
two reflected waves cancel each other."
Unfortunately, he didn't say what happens to the intrinsic energy
necessary for those two canceled waves to have existed in the first
place. The question is: At the moment that two waves are canceled,
do they give up their intrinsic energy components? Or, as in the sour
grapes tale, were they never associated with any intrinsic energy to
begin with?
--
73, Cecil
http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp
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