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Old August 13th 08, 02:49 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jim Kelley Jim Kelley is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 666
Default Phase array question

Cecil Moore wrote:
Joel Koltner wrote:
"Powers don't add, field strengths do"


"Add" is a rather loosely defined term. A more technically
precise statement would be: "Powers don't superpose, field
strengths do."


Fields superpose, numbers add, and power is the rate of change in energy.

When fields superpose, they still must obey
the conservation of energy principle, i.e. the total energy
before the superposition must equal the total energy after
the superposition.


It's almost as if you think that if you don't always point it out,
energy won't be conserved! :-)

Given two RF waves in a transmission line and the phase angle,
A, between the two electric fields, the following Power equation,
published in QEX, gives us a valid method of "adding" two powers.

Ptotal = P1 + P2 + 2*SQRT(P1*P2)*cos(A)


According to fig. 7.1 in Born and Wolf, that's useful for showing how
light intensity varies as a function of phase, and hence position. It's
just that there's no valid way to multiply by the cosine of the angle
between two scalars.

Maybe wave problems are best solved using waves.

The last term is known in optics as the "interference"
term, positive for constructive interference and negative
for destructive interference. Angle A, the phase angle
between the two electric fields, determines the sign
of the last term and thus whether interference is
destructive or constructive.


(A+B)*(A+B) = A^2 + B^2 + 2AB

Must the first order term (2AB) in such equations always be referred to
as "The Interference Term", Cecil? Doing so seems to impart a greater
level of importance to it than to the other, unnamed terms in the
equation. The factored form must then be least important of all.

Beats, interference, and modulation are fundamentally the same
phenomenon. There's no need to get all worked up about one of them in
deference to the others, just as there's no need to worry about there
being a node for every antinode.

73, ac6xg