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On Mar 25, 8:23 pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
You are not allowed to deny the existence of the 450 ohm real world load while asserting that it still exists. If it exists, it dissipates the reflected energy. If it doesn't exist, it reflects the reflected energy. Please choose one or the other - obviously, you cannot have both at the same time. [snip] If reflected energy is not dissipated, it undergoes destructive interference and is redirected back toward the load as constructive interference instead of being incident upon the source. I like these two paragraphs. They describe exactly what I would expect the relationships to be were "reflected energy" to represent real energy. More importantly, they describe an expectation that is sufficiently precise to be falsifiable. But just to be sure I understand the meaning, let me restate them algebraically: Energy.reflected = Energy.dissipated + Energy.re-reflected If this is not what you meant, then please read no further until you correct my misinterpretataion. ---- Oh good. The interpretation is accepted. So let us call this "Cecil's Hypothesis": "If reflected energy is not dissipated, it is redirected back toward the load." Expressed as an equality: Energy.reflected = Energy.dissipated + Energy.re-reflected And for convenience, its power form: Preflected = Pdissipated + Pre-reflected Now all we need is a single example for which the equality does not hold and "Cecil's Hypothesis" will be disproved. Let us start with the example previously offerred: - Generator with 450 Ohm output impedance - connected directly to a 1000 foot line with 450 Ohm characteristic impedance - connected to a load with 75 Ohm input impedance. And to simplify computation and produce a numerical result, we add a few more details: - The generator is 2 Amp current source in parallel with a 450 Ohm resistor - The line is 31 wavelengths long Let the experiment begin: - The generator is off. - All currents, voltages, energies and powers are zero. - Turn on the current source. - The current source pushes 2 Amps. - This is divided equally between the 450 Ohm generator resistor and the 450 Ohm line. - The generator output voltage is 450 Volts. - The generator output current is 1 Amp. - 450 Watts is being put out by the generator - 450 Watts is being dissipated in the generator resistor - A real wattmeter (one that measures voltage and current) shows 450 Joules/s flowing down the line. (Is it okay to say that "450 Watts are flowing"?) - A directional wattmeter indicates that the "forward power" is 450 Watts and the "reflected power" is 0 Watts. - Vfwd is 450 Volts - Ifwd is 1 Amp - The load is happily oblivious to the oncoming onslaught. - 31 cycles later, the voltage, current and energy reach the load. - But there is an impedance discontinuity which creates a voltage reflection coefficient of -0.714 so the load refuses to accept all the incoming energy. - The voltage across the load is 128.6 Volts - The current into the load is 1.714 Amps - The power dissipated in the load is 220.4 Watts - Vref is -321.5 Volts - Iref is 0.714 Amps - Vfwd is still 450 Volts (the line is lossless for this example) - Ifwd is still 1 Amp - "Forward power" is 450 Watts - "Reflected power" is 229.6 Watts - 220.4 = 450 - 229.6 which is as expected and demonstrates the usefullness of a directional wattmeter for computing actual power transferred (or is it energy?). - Encountering the reflection has caused a change in the voltage and current and this change is now propagating back towards the generator. - 31 cycles later, this change in line conditions reaches the generator. - The conditions at the generator terminals are now the same as the load since it is an integral number of wavelengths from the load. - The voltage at the generator terminals is 128.6 Volts - The current out of the generator is 1.714 Amps - The "forward power" is still 450 Watts. - The "reflected power" has changed from 0 to 229.6 Watts. - There is 128.6 volts across the 450 Ohm generator resistor. - There is 0.286 Amps flowing in the 450 Ohm generator resistor - Because the 0.286 Amps in the 450 Ohm generator resistor plus the 1.714 Amps flowing into the line is 2 Amps, exactly the output of the current source, the system has now settled after one round trip. There is no re-reflection at the generator terminals (and no ghosts). - The power into the line is 220.4 Watts - The power into the 450 Ohm generator resistor is 38.6 Watts - 229.6 Watts of "reflected power" has reduced the dissipation in the generator resistor by 413.4 Watts. - Substituting into the hypothetical equality Preflected = Pdissipated + Pre-reflected 229.6 = -413.4 + 0 - The equality does not hold, thus disproving "Cecil's Hypothesis". It is instructive to also consider the case with a generator constructed as a 900 Volt voltage source connected to a 450 Ohm output resistor. In this case the 450 Watts dissipated for the first 62 cycles increases by 872 Watts to 1322 Watts when the reflection arrives. Similar to above there is no re-reflection or ghosts. Once again the hypothetical equality Preflected = Pdissipated + Pre-reflected 229.6 = 872 + 0 does not hold. But the principle of "conservation of energy" should hold whenever real energies are involved. Since it does not hold in this case, we can only conclude that the numbers computed for "forward and reverse power" do not represent any real energy flows but are merely conveniences to facilitate other computations. ....Keith |
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