Constructive interference in radiowave propagation
Cecil Moore wrote:
K7ITM wrote:
No, it's about practicality. Convince me that calculations based
primarily on power (or energy) rather than on voltage and current
offer me something useful, with respect to TEM lines, and I might have
a closer look at them.
Assume you are dealing with light waves in free space
instead of RF waves in a transmission line. Would you
then find intensity (power density) calculations useful?
That's why optical physicists find them so useful.
Tom, are you familiar with an s-parameter analysis?
If so, it seems to me that b1 = s11(a1) + s12(a2) = 0
represent two wave components that immediately cancel
to zero when superposed at the impedance discontinuity.
Would you care to comment?
Cecil,
Most serious calculations by optical physicists are done through
Maxwell's Equations solvers. Intensity calculations are utterly
inadequate for exploring the details of high resolution imaging, for
example.
73,
Gene
W4SZ
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