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Old April 21st 07, 12:37 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Dave Dave is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
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Default Independence of waves


"K7ITM" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Apr 20, 10:10 pm, Roy Lewallen wrote:
Correction:

Roy Lewallen wrote:

Superposition means the following: If f(x) is the result of excitation
x
and f(y) is the result of excitation y, then the result of excitation
(x
+ y) is f(x + y). . .


That should read:

Superposition means the following: If f(x) is the result of excitation x
and f(y) is the result of excitation y, then the result of excitation
(x + y) is f(x) + f(y). . .
^^^^^^^^^^^
I apologize for the error. Thanks very much to David Ryeburn for
spotting it.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


I guess that's the definition of linearity. I'm not sure I've heard
it called superposition before, but rather that the superposition
theorem is a direct result of the linearity of a system. I trust
that's a small definitional issue that doesn't really change what
you're saying.

Cheers,
Tom


linearity of the system is VERY important. it is what prevents the
waves/fields from interacting and making something new. empty space is
linear, air is (normally) linear, conductors (like antennas) are linear.
consider a conductor in space. if 2 different waves are incident upon it
you can analyze each interaction separately and just add the results.
However, if there is a rusty joint in that conductor you must analyze the
two incident waves together and you end up with not only the sum of their
resultant fields, but also various mixing products and other new stuff. so
yes, linearity is a very important consideration when talking about multiple
waves or fields and assuming superposition is correct.