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On Apr 13, 6:13 pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
Jim Kelley wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: It is impossible for a "partially reflective surface" to reflect 100% of the intensity. But that's wrong. If it was right, then a partially reflective surface couldn't be used to prevent reflections either. That's faulty logic born out of ignorance. Partially reflective surfaces can (and are) in fact used to prevent reflections, just as they are used to 100% re-reflect partial reflections from a load. The magnitude of a1 reflected by that impedance discontinuity *DOES NOT CHANGE* from the very first incidence of a1. That was the main point of my post, Cecil. The reflective coefficient DOES NOT CHANGE. You're the one who claims that it does. What happens to the energy in the canceled waves? There is no energy "in" cancelled waves. Your ideas in that regard are faulty. Energy only exists where fields aren't cancelled. That should be obvious even to someone with propensities such as yours. ac6xg |
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