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Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: "... 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." The killer is that word "somehow"... "all of the photon energy must somehow be redistributed". That's not a killer, Ian, that's a challenge to people like me to figure out how. If there is indeed a "somehow", then there has to be a "how". Please don't try to dampen my curiosity like the church priests tried to dampen Galileo's curiosity. Well of course it must! Nobody denies that conservation of energy will hold, in a system with properly defined boundaries. But the weakness of a photon model is that it cannot provide a detailed nuts-and-bolts explanation of the mechanism by which that energy becomes redistributed in time and space. I'm sure a QED explanation exists but we might have trouble understanding it. I would like for you and others to follow me through an energy analysis to see if you can find anything technically wrong with it besides your revulsion to the approach. A wave model will provide all of that detail - and in transmission-line problems we can use it. If we trace what happens to forward and reflected waves of voltage (and/or current) we can predict the magnitudes and phases of those quantities at any location, at any instant. That gives us a complete time-dependent map of the voltage and current across the entire system. From that, we can also find out where the energy is - the inputs, outputs, losses and stored energy. Sure enough, we will find that energy is conserved within the system boundaries... but that is no big deal, we always knew it would. In a wave model, conservation of energy is something you should check for, but only as an overall confirmation that you've done the sums correctly. All the useful detail came from the analysis of the voltage and/or current waves. I agree with everything except your last sentence. There is lots of useful information to be had from tracking the energy through the system including how and why the energy in the reflected wave changes direction and momentum. If you think that information doesn't matter or is not useful, then that's your opinion. But please don't condemn the individuals who find that information useful and go for an explanation. And please don't say that explanation is wrong if you cannot prove it to be invalid. In the process of tracing forward and reflected waves, we must remember that they obey the laws of physics including their energy contents. The average forward energy per unit time in a forward voltage of Vf RMS volts is Vf^2/Z0 joules/sec, an assumption upon which the S-Parameter analysis system is based. The average reflected energy per unit time in a reflected RMS voltage is Vr^2/Z0 joules/sec. In an S-Parameter analysis, if you square any of the normalized voltage terms, you get joules/sec. Someone said that at microwave frequencies, the powers are often easier to measure than the voltages and currents. The powers can be measured and the voltages and currents calculated from the power measurements. In optics, physicists don't have the luxury of dealing with voltages and currents. They must necessarily deal with energy and power. That field of physics is older (and wiser) than RF engineering and they deal with power reflection coefficients, not voltage reflection coefficients. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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