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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 |
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