On Jan 24, 10:33*pm, Roger Sparks wrote:
[snip]
By examining this derivation, the reader can see that power and energy
is reflected when a wave encounters a discontinuity. *The reader can
also see that more power is present on the transmission line than is
delivered to the load.
This is the conventional phraseology for describing the behaviour at
the impedance discontinuity.
Allow me to offer a specific example for which this phraseology is
inappropriate.
Consider a 50 V step function generator with an output impedance of
50 ohms driving a 50 ohm line that is 1 second long terminated in an
open circuit.
Turn on the generator. A 50 V step propagates down the line. The
generator is putting 50 J/s into the line. One second later it
reaches the open end and begins propagating backwards.
After two seconds it reaches the generator. The voltage at the
generator is now 100 V and no current is flowing from the
generator into the line. In the 2 seconds, the generator put
100 joules into the line which is now stored in the line.
The line is at a constant 100 V and the current is zero everywhere.
Computing Pf and
Pr will yield 50 W forward and 50 W reflected.
And yet no current is flowing anywhere. The voltage on the line
is completely static.
And yet some will claim that 50 W is flowing forward and 50 W
is flowing backwards.
Does this seem like a reasonable claim for an open circuited
transmission line with constant voltage along its length and
no current anywhere?
I do not find it so.
...Keith