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J.B. Wood wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: The unit of power is the watt. If power is being transmitted, the transmitted power would have units of watts/sec or joules/sec/sec. What would be the physical meaning of joules per second squared? I have no idea what you're talking about, Cecil. I know and you are not alone. I was taught about power transmission in college but it was actually energy transmission they were talking about. The power company doesn't charge me for power - they charge me for KWH, i.e. energy. Consider a Bird wattmeter in a flat transmission line. It is at a fixed point reading watts. Are the watts moving? The Bird is displaying joules/sec passing a fixed point. The joules are certainly moving but are the joules/sec moving? As you noted, it seems that if the joules/sec are moving then the joules must necessarily be accelerating. You can measure the number of cars passing over a bridge in one hour and write that number on your notepad. The cars are moving but is that cars/hour measurement written on your notepad moving? If so, where is it going? -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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