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![]() Cecil Moore wrote: Jim Kelley wrote: Most engineers equate the units of power to power, i.e. joules/sec = watts and so does the IEEE dictionary. I can't speak for most engineers, but I think the first time I saw it was in high school physics, and of course later in engineering school. That was about 35 years ago. I think of it a fundamental concept - one that I happen to understand very well. Not unlike the relationship between Joules and electron-volts. But I am content to assert that the joules in the joules per second of a reflected wave is real energy. Do you disagree? I don't agree that the terms power and energy become interchangeable by virtue of the fact that their units can both be expressed with the word Joule in them. One can find himself making unrealistic predictions if he is not precise in his application of the ideas which underlie these terms. 73, ac6xg |
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