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On Apr 20, 5:54 pm, Owen Duffy wrote:
Some of the problems in the analysis are as a result of trying to determine conditions at a point, which can have no area, and presumably no power, but yet E field and H field. It is usual, I believe, to talk about power density. Volts per meter times amps per meter is watts per square meter. It's not watts at a point, or along a line, but over an area. Of course, you have to be careful what you mean by that. The actual value of the power density will be a function of position and time, of course, and will in general be different at one point than at a point a meter, a millimeter, or a micron removed. It can also be useful to add the dimension of frequency: the power density is also a function of frequency. I think the discussion is mainly exploring a detailed definition of the concept of superposition of radio waves. It seems to mean different things to different people, but it is used as if it has a shared meaning. One of the points of the "fields are interpreted by some as physical, and by others as mathematical abstractions," which is a preamble to further antenna discussions in the book I'm thinking of, is that it doesn't matter which way you view them; if both camps describe their behaviour the same way, the observable result is the same. Cheers, Tom |
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