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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote in message . .. Jerry Martes wrote: "Cecil Moore" wrote in message Yet in our above example the stub is physically 90 degrees long and the source sees +j500 ohms. The above stub is electrically 130 degrees long. I'd disagree with a conclusion that, just because the impedance seen by the source is 500 ohms, the line connecting it to a load is 90 degrees long. Well, it is physically 90 degrees long because the two physical pieces are physically 45 degrees each. That's a given. However, the +j500 result tells us that it is electrically 130 degrees removed from the open circuit at the far end. There is a 45 degree delay through the Z01 section of stub. There is a 45 degree delay through the Z02 section of stub. There is a 40 degree phase shift at the Z01 to Z02 junction If I disagree, do I have to get involved with some lengthy mathmatical discussion? I'm not skilled enough to argue with you Cecil. I'm not even smart. But, I sure dont see how anyone can conclude there is a phase shift at the junction of two transmission lines. There is an abrupt change in the Gamma angle of the reflection coefficient at the impedance discontinuity. I can show you why on a phasor graphic. Simplified, it goes something like this. Itotal = 21.5*sin(25) = 10*sin(65) where 21.5 is the phasor amplitude of the current in the 50 ohm section at the junction and 10 is the phasor amplitude of the current in the 600 ohm section at the junction. The values must be the same even though the magnitude of Z0, which controls the amplitude of the current, has changed. If those values must be equal and the amplitude changes because the Z0 changed, the only other thing that can change is the phase angle. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp Hi Cecil Thanks for pointing me toward learning about reflection coefficient. I am really surprised that there is such a large amount of phase shift at that junction. Jerry |