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On Dec 30, 2:12*am, Roy Lewallen wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: . . . Notice a key point about this description. It is completely in terms of charge. There is not a single mention of EM waves, travelling or otherwise. Now we expand the experiment by placing a pulse generator at each end of the line and triggering them to each generate a 50V one second pulse at the same time. So after one second a pulse has completely entered each end of the line and these pulse are racing towards each other at the speed of light (in the line). In another second these pulses will collide at the middle of the line. What will happen? Recall one of the basics about charge: like charge repel. So it is no surprise that these two pulses of charge bounce off each and head back from where they came. At the center of the line, for one second the voltage is 100 V (50 V from each pulse), while the current is always zero. No charge crossed the mid-point. No energy crossed the mid-point (how could it if the current is always zero (i.e. no charge moves) at the mid-point. * . . . That's an interesting and compelling argument. With the conditions you describe, I don't see how it would be possible to tell whether the waves reflected from each other or simply passed by without interacting. But suppose we launch waves of different shapes from the two directions, say a triangular wave and a rectangular one. Or perhaps make them asymmetrical in some fashion. It seems to me that then we should be able to tell which of the two possibilities happened. Being different, you could argue that the reflection wouldn't be complete. But shouldn't we expect some distortion of any part of a pulse that was acted upon by the * other? I'll put my money on each of the waves arriving at the opposite end unchanged. What do you predict will happen? I predict that the pulse arriving at the left end will have the same voltage, current and energy profile as the pulse launched at the right end and the pulse arriving at the right end will be similar to the one launched at the left. They will appear exactly AS IF they had passed through each other. The difficulty with saying THE pulses passed through each other arises with the energy. The energy profile of the pulse arriving at the left will look exactly like that of the one launched from the right so it will seem that the energy travelled all the way down the line for delivery at the far end. And yet, from the experiment above, when the pulses arriving from each end have the same shape, no energy crosses the middle of the line. So it would seem that the energy that actually crosses the middle during the collision is exacly the amount of energy that is needed to reconstruct the pulses on each side after the collision. If all the energy that is launched at one end does not travel to the other end, then I am not comfortable saying that THE pulse travelled from one end to the other. But I have no problem saying that the system behaves AS IF the pulses travelled from one end to the other. On the other, it is completely intriguing that a directional voltmeter could be placed anywhere on the line and the voltage profile of the two pulses can be recovered. And this is true even at the middle of the line where, in the experiment with identical pulse shapes, no current flows and no energy crosses. But the shape of the two pulses can still be recovered. So in the end I say it is AS IF the voltage and current pulses pass through each other, but the energy does not necessarily do so. That way I am not left with having to account for where the reflected energy goes when it arrives back at the source. ...Keith |
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