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#41
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Gene Fuller wrote:
It is easy to give examples where the waves survive the superposition, because they always do. It is rather strange that you are making this argument after all the back and forth about traveling waves and standing waves. Do we now have multiple flavors of EM waves? Some that obey superposition and some that don't? They all obey superposition which can occur with or without interference. And you are wrong about all waves surviving superposition. Canceled waves do not survive wave cancellation in the direction that they are traveling. Access this web page and set the two waves to equal frequencies, equal magnitudes, and opposite phases, i.e. 0 and 180 degrees. http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/j...ons/index.html When you do that, the waves are canceled in their original direction of travel. The energy in those canceled waves certainly survives, but those two original waves cease to exist never to be seen again. I must have missed class the day they went over the theory of "cancellation". You must have. Please run the above java application and alleviate your ignorance about what you missed. Why do the waves disappear when they are of equal magnitude and opposite phase? I stand 100% behind my two messages to Walt. If you actually read them you would note that I said for most cases it makes no difference whether the waves interfere forever or whether they interact and "cancel". Of course it makes all the difference in the world. That's what the entire argument is all about. You simply cannot sweep the truth under the "does not matter" rug. And until you can say "all cases" instead of "most cases" your argument is irrelevant. If it doesn't work for all, it doesn't work at all. The bottom line is that EM waves do not interact in free space. It is indeed difficult to get two beams of light collinear in space space. But it is not difficult at all to get two RF waves collinear in a transmission line. It happens every time someone adjusts his antenna tuner for a Z0-match. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#42
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Keith Dysart wrote:
Do Born and Wolf offer crisp definitions of the boundaries between coherent, partially coherent, and mutually incoherent? Or is it a continuum arbitrarily divided into 3 regions for the purposes of discussion? The IEEE Dictionary has an interesting definition for "degree of coherence". Imax means intensity maximum and Imin means intensity minimum. Visibility = (Imax-Imin)/(Imax+Imin) Light is considered "highly coherent" when Visibility exceeds 0.88 and "partially coherent" when Visibility is less than 0.88. Incoherent for "very small values" of Visibility. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#43
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On Apr 8, 7:09 pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: Do Born and Wolf offer crisp definitions of the boundaries between coherent, partially coherent, and mutually incoherent? Or is it a continuum arbitrarily divided into 3 regions for the purposes of discussion? The IEEE Dictionary has an interesting definition for "degree of coherence". Imax means intensity maximum and Imin means intensity minimum. Visibility = (Imax-Imin)/(Imax+Imin) Light is considered "highly coherent" when Visibility exceeds 0.88 and "partially coherent" when Visibility is less than 0.88. Incoherent for "very small values" of Visibility. This is good; a continuum with high coherence at one end, low coherence at the other and medium in the middle, and, of course, since the ends are infinitely small, no such thing as perfect coherence or "NO" coherence (at least in the real world). This then takes us back to the original point; there is always some interference, though it may be small enough that an engineer does not find it of interest. ....Keith |
#44
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Cecil Moore wrote:
Gene Fuller wrote: It is easy to give examples where the waves survive the superposition, because they always do. It is rather strange that you are making this argument after all the back and forth about traveling waves and standing waves. Do we now have multiple flavors of EM waves? Some that obey superposition and some that don't? They all obey superposition which can occur with or without interference. And you are wrong about all waves surviving superposition. Canceled waves do not survive wave cancellation in the direction that they are traveling. Access this web page and set the two waves to equal frequencies, equal magnitudes, and opposite phases, i.e. 0 and 180 degrees. http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/j...ons/index.html When you do that, the waves are canceled in their original direction of travel. The energy in those canceled waves certainly survives, but those two original waves cease to exist never to be seen again. I must have missed class the day they went over the theory of "cancellation". You must have. Please run the above java application and alleviate your ignorance about what you missed. Why do the waves disappear when they are of equal magnitude and opposite phase? [snip] Cecil, That's really funny. A grad student and a programmer put together a simply java applet to try to illustrate the concept of interference, and you treat it as a new bible. I bet the authors would be appalled by your interpretation. By the way, did you look beyond the pretty pictures and read the section where the authors said, "All of the wave examples presented in Figure 1 portray waves propagating in the same direction, but in many cases, light waves traveling in different directions can briefly meet and undergo interference. After the waves have passed each other, however, they will resume their original course, having the same amplitude, wavelength, and phase that they had before meeting." Hmmm, I think that is exactly what I said in this thread on RRAA. 73, Gene W4SZ |
#45
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Keith Dysart wrote:
This is good; a continuum with high coherence at one end, low coherence at the other and medium in the middle, and, of course, since the ends are infinitely small, no such thing as perfect coherence or "NO" coherence (at least in the real world). But remember that definition is for fiber optics sources, not amateur radio sources. Coherency in amateur radio systems can get as close as a zero reading on a reflected power meter. Still there are those nagging assertions of Born and Wolf that for two equal magnitude signals, the total intensity possible for incoherent signals is double the intensity of one signal. The total intensity possible for coherent signals is four times the intensity of one signal. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#46
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Gene Fuller wrote:
That's really funny. A grad student and a programmer put together a simply java applet to try to illustrate the concept of interference, and you treat it as a new bible. I bet the authors would be appalled by your interpretation. One more example of an ignorant person making fun of something he doesn't understand. One of those signals is s11(a1). The other is s12(a2). Added together they equal zero. That's the S-Parameter equation for reflections toward the source. b1 = s11(a1) + s12(a2) = 0 If s11, a1, s12, and a2 are all not zero, the above equation describes wave cancellation, something you say never happens. By the way, did you look beyond the pretty pictures and read the section where the authors said, "All of the wave examples presented in Figure 1 portray waves propagating in the same direction, but in many cases, light waves traveling in different directions can briefly meet and undergo interference. After the waves have passed each other, however, they will resume their original course, having the same amplitude, wavelength, and phase that they had before meeting." Yes, that happens "in many cases" but NOT IN ALL CASES. You apparently missed the point which is the part where they said: "... when two waves of equal amplitude and wavelength that are 180-degrees ... out of phase with each other meet, they are not actually annihilated, ... All of the photon energy present in these waves must somehow be recovered or redistributed in a new direction, according to the law of energy conservation ... Instead, upon meeting, the photons are redistributed to regions that permit constructive interference, so the effect should be considered as a redistribution of light waves and photon energy rather than the spontaneous construction or destruction of light." Hmmm, I think that is exactly what I said in this thread on RRAA. No, what you have said on RRAA is that wave cancellation never happens because wave cancellation doesn't occur in many cases. That is obviously faulty logic and all it takes to prove you wrong is one case of wave cancellation. That case happens every time a ham adjusts his antenna tuner for zero reflected power. If we consider the java ap as the reflected waves flowing toward the source, setting them to 0 and 180 degrees is exactly what happens at the antenna tuner. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#47
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On Mon, 09 Apr 2007 02:45:52 GMT, Cecil Moore
wrote: All of the photon energy present in these waves must somehow be recovered or redistributed in a new direction, according to the law of energy conservation New heights of sheer stupidity. This sounds like bingo night in the church basement where no one actually loses any money, it just gets shuffled around. "Recovered OR redistributed" ... this certainly qualifies for next year's Oscar for chuckles. Luckily the Nobel committee doesn't follow Hollywood or they would have awarded Mighty Mouse the Physics award for antigravity (certainly 50 million children's admiration couldn't lead them astray on this choice!). |
#48
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I'd vowed that I wouldn't hit this tarbaby yet again. But here I go.
Among the junk science being bandied about here is the following supposition: Suppose you have beams from two identical coherent lasers which, by a system of (presumably partially reflective and partially transmissive) mirrors, are made to shine in exactly the same direction from the same point (which I'll call the "summing point"). Further, suppose that the paths from the two lasers to this summing point differ by an odd number of half wavelengths. So beyond the summing point, where the laser beams exactly overlie each other, there is no beam because the two exactly cancel. Or, in other words, the sum of the two superposed fields is zero. The recurring argument is that because each laser is producing energy and yet there is no net field and therefore no energy in the summed beams, something strange has happened at the summing point (or "virtual short circuit"), and creative explanations are necessary to account for the "missing energy". One such proposed explanation is that the mere meeting of the two beams is the cause of some kind of a reflection of energy, and that each wave somehow detects and interacts with the other. Well, here's what I think. I think that no one will be able to draw a diagram of such a summing system which doesn't also produce, due solely to the reflection and transmission of the mirrors, a beam or beams containing exactly the amount of energy "missing" from the summed beam. No interaction(*) of the two beams at or beyond the summing point is necessary to account for the "missing" energy -- you'll find it all at other places in the system. Just as you do in a phased antenna array, where the regions of cancelled field are always accompanied by complementary regions of reinforced field. Somewhere, in some bounce from a mirror or pass through it, the beams will end up reinforcing each other is some other direction. My challenge is this: Sketch a system which will produce this summation of out-of-phase beams, showing the reflectivity and transmissivity of each mirror, and showing the beams and their phases going in all directions from the interactions from each mirror. Then show that simple interaction of the beams with the mirrors is insufficient to account for the final distribution of energy. Next, do the same for a transmission line. Show how two coherent traveling waves can be produced which will propagate together in the same direction but out of phase with each other, resulting in a net zero field at all points beyond some summing point. But also calculate the field from waves reflected at the summing point and elsewhere in the system due to simple impedance changes. Show that this simple analysis, assuming no interaction between the traveling waves, is insufficient to account for all the energy. A single case will do. Until someone is able to do this, I'll stand firm with the unanimous findings of countless mathematical and practical analyses which show superposition of and no interaction between waves or fields in a linear medium. (*) By "interaction" I mean that one beam or wave has an effect on the other, altering it in some way -- for example, causing it to change amplitude, phase, orientation, or direction. I'm not including superposition, that is the fact that the net field of the two waves is the sum of the two, in the meaning of "interaction". Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#49
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Richard Clark wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: All of the photon energy present in these waves must somehow be recovered or redistributed in a new direction, according to the law of energy conservation New heights of sheer stupidity. This sounds like bingo night in the church basement where no one actually loses any money, it just gets shuffled around. One more example of an ignorant person making fun of things he doesn't understand. The principle of the conservation of energy indeed states that energy is not gained or lost - it just gets shuffled around. When EM wave cancellation occurs, the energy remains in EM wave form and simply gets redistributed. As we tune our antenna tuners while watching the reflected power indication, we are varying the magnitude and phase of the two component reflected waves at the tuner input. When those two component waves are adjusted to equal magnitudes and opposite phase, reflections toward the source are obviously canceled since they can be measured as going to zero in the direction of the source. The following S-Parameter equation describes the final outcome toward the source. b1 = s11(a1) + s12(a2) = 0, total destructive interference Since energy cannot be destroyed by an antenna tuner and since there are only two directions available, in a lossless system, the energy in waves canceled toward the source must be redistributed (re-reflected) to waves traveling toward the load as constructive interference. That's the other S-Parameter equation. b2 = s21(a1) + s22(a2) = Vfor/SQRT(Z0) Square those equations and you get the power equations. |b1|^2 = net reflected power = 0 |b2|^2 = net forward power = all the available power -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
#50
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"Cecil Moore"
Still there are those nagging assertions of Born and Wolf that for two equal magnitude signals, the total intensity possible for incoherent signals is double the intensity of one signal. The total intensity possible for coherent signals is four times the intensity of one signal. ________ It is a fairly common practice in broadcast designs to combine the outputs of two r-f amplifiers of equal power rating, using a 4-port, 3 dB coaxial hybrid. The two amplifiers are driven by a single exciter through a suitable splitter. The antenna connects to one output port of the hybrid, and the other output port is connected to a dummy load. When the relative r-f phases of the two txs are suitably set, the antenna connection of the hybrid receives the total output power of the two txs, and the dummy load port receives zero. When the relative r-f phases of the txs are changed by 90 degrees from that setting, then the conditions at the output ports are reversed. The total average power available at the hybrid output for both of these conditions is twice that of a single tx without the hybrid. Does the quote from Born and Wolf support this? RF |
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