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#2
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I've come around to that conservation of energy stuff ;-)
I understand that your argument involves the energy that enters the line before it knows anything about the load, the energy that enters in an initial transient, but unless you can show that nothing happens during the initial transient to deliver some or all of that initial energy to the load, your argument has a hole. You're presupposing that there is some energy that enters the line during an initial transient that cannot leave until you shut the source off, so you get the 100J related to the 100W net power flow and 100J that went into the line before the source knew about the load.. and then there's another 100J that enters somehow? I guess to set up the reflected wave? The argument is circular. The initial transient supplies 200J of stored energy to the line so there must be 300J in a one second line if there's 100J in the steady-state fields associated with power flow. Since there's 300J in the line, the initial transient must have supplied 200J in stored energy. It's just not working for me. Dan |
#3
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wrote:
I've come around to that conservation of energy stuff ;-) I'm glad - most folks here ignore it. :-) I understand that your argument involves the energy that enters the line before it knows anything about the load, the energy that enters in an initial transient, but unless you can show that nothing happens during the initial transient to deliver some or all of that initial energy to the load, your argument has a hole. Let's return to the one second long lossless transmission line. From a 100 watt transmitter, at the end of second number one, the line will contain 100 joules and the load will have accepted zero joules. Since the load is rejecting 1/2 of the incident energy, at the end of the 2nd second, the source will have supplied 200 joules, there will be 150 joules of energy in the line, and 50 joules will have been accepted by the load. If the source is equipped with a circulator+load, this is steady-state with 150 joules of energy stored in the transmission line. At t=0: zero joules zero joules 100w--------one-second long feedline------load rho^2=0.5 Pfor=0-- --Pref=0 Pload=0 At t=1: 100 joules zero joules 100w--------one-second long feedline------load Pfor=100w-- --Pref=0 Pload=0 At t=2: 150 joules 50 joules 100w--------one-second long feedline------load Pfor=100w-- --Pref=50w Pload=50w You're presupposing that there is some energy that enters the line during an initial transient that cannot leave until you shut the source off, so you get the 100J related to the 100W net power flow and 100J that went into the line before the source knew about the load.. and then there's another 100J that enters somehow? I guess to set up the reflected wave? Yes, at the end of the 2nd second, the source has supplied 200 joules and the load has accepted 50 joules. That leaves 150 joules left over that cannot be any place except in the line according to the conservation of energy principle. In a circulator+load system, we have reached steady state with 150 joules in the transmission line that will not reach the load until after the source is powered down. The argument is circular. Proving that confusion exists. It's actually not circular. It's based on cause, effect, and the conservation of energy principle. I apologize if I have not explained it in a way that is easy to understand. Please bear with me. It's all linear cause and effect. With an ideal auto-tuner at the source, none of the reflected energy is accepted back by the source. Half the energy incident upon the load is rejected. There is no other place for the extra energy to be except inside the transmission line. I have an EXCEL spreadsheet that might help you sort all of this out. A copy of its output is available at: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secsgat.gif -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#4
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Cecil Moore wrote:
I have an EXCEL spreadsheet that might help you sort all of this out. A copy of its output is available at: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secsgat.gif The EXCEL spreadsheet corresponding to the above can be downloaded from: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secTline.xls It includes a graph of forward power, reflected power, and joules stored in the transmission line. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#5
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Cecil Moore wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: I have an EXCEL spreadsheet that might help you sort all of this out. A copy of its output is available at: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secsgat.gif The EXCEL spreadsheet corresponding to the above can be downloaded from: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secTline.xls It includes a graph of forward power, reflected power, and joules stored in the transmission line. I have enhanced that spreadsheet such that the resistive load on the one second long lossless 50 ohm feedline is a variable entered by the user. Please note the graph of forward power, reflected power, and joules stored in the feedline (chart1). The enhanced file is available at: http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp/1secline.xls -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#6
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Cecil,
Have you included the fact that the *source* is properly terminating the line on its end? The source can accept power from the reflected wave, right? Dan |
#7
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wrote:
Have you included the fact that the *source* is properly terminating the line on its end? The source is relying on an ideal autotuner to terminate the line with a 50 ohm Z0-match. The source can accept power from the reflected wave, right? No, there is an ideal autotuner on the output of the source. *Zero reflected energy reaches the source*. The SWR between the Source and the Autotuner is 1:1 just as it is in any properly tuned antenna system. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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