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Cecil Moore wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: Superposition of voltages and currents seems to be quite accepted and is an excellent tool for circuit and transmission line analysis. Do you really expect us to believe that those voltages and currents can exist without energy? Maybe an example of EM voltage and EM current existing without ExB joules/sec would help. Cecil, If you actually understood the way the Poynting Theorem works, you would not waste your time worrying about ExB. It provides no useful information in support of your wacky energy flow ideas. Hint: Although the Poynting vector is defined as ExB, this is only a flux. If you are interested in information relating to conservation of energy it is necessary to integrate over a closed volume. The total integral of the flux over the surface of that volume is then equal to the rate of change of energy within the volume. In your favorite example, where energy is coursing back and forth along the two directions of a lossless transmission line, this integral over any volume you choose will be exactly zero. Even if you could separate the forward and reverse waves the Poynting vector energy calculation would still come out to exactly zero for each component as well as the sum of the components. The same amount of energy exits the integration volume as enters it. Only in the case where there is a source or where there is loss will the Poynting energy calculation yield a non-zero value. If you want further information you can check advanced textbooks such as "Classical Electrodynamics" by Jackson or "Principles of Optics" by Born and Wolf. I am sure there are many other references, but those are the two I check almost daily. 73, Gene W4SZ |
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