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On Nov 27, 9:00 am, Cecil Moore wrote:
Jim Kelley wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: When an EM wave disappears in its original direction of travel, what happens to its energy? What happens to the energy flowing in the lamp cord when you turn out your desk lamp? :-) It still exists. It just ceases to be converted to heat. Do you believe energy can be destroyed? I am surprised you did not provide a more complete answer to the question. When the switch is opened it creates a point with a reflection coefficient of 1 so all the energy reaching the point is 100% reflected. This reflected energy flows back along the line until it reaches a distribution transformer where it is transformed back into the transmission system. It then flows back along the transmission system until it reaches the generator (passing through several transformers along the way). Of course, there are numerous impedance discontinuities which make computation more complex and increase the settling time, but the priniciple of reflected energy still holds. For convenience, we assume the generator is in a hydraulic plant which transforms the energy of flowing water into electricity. This is reversable, so the reflected energy is transformed through the generator and turbine into a reflected water flow which flows up the penstock. Of course, the net water flow is still downhill, but never forget that there is a real forward flow and a real reflected flow of water. It is a bit harder to explain where the reflected ernergy goes in a thermal plant because the process does not appear reversible, that is, energy into the generator is not obviously converted back into coal. Still, it must happen somehow. After all the generator in the thermal plant is fundamentally the same as the one in the hydraulic. This leads to the inescapble conclusion that there must be reflected coal trains carrying coal back to the mines, though the net flow is still from the mine to the thermal plant. Or is it just possible that some have been overextending a mostly useful tool? ....Keith |
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