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Roy Lewallen, W7EL wrote:
"Certainly, the total V and I are in quadrature if the line is terminated by an open, short, or purely reactive load. But not in any other case." Something else is at work. The reflection reverses direction of the wave producing a 180-degree phase shift in either voltage or current, but not both, if there is a reflection. Because the waves are traveling at the sane speed in approaching each other, they produce a phase reversal in a distance of only 90-degrees instead of 180-degrees. This places the waves in quadrature to stay. Terman shows the vector diagrams of incident and reflected waves combined to produce a voltage distribution on an almost lossless transmission line (Zo=R) for an open circuit case and for a resistive load case where the load is Zo in Fig. 4-3 on page 91 of his 1955 opus. Indeed, the angle between the incident and reflected voltages is 90-degrees in either case. In Fig. 4-4 on page 92, Terman shows voltage and current distributions produced on low-loss transmission lines by different load impedances and in every case volts and amps are in quadrature. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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