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On Jan 12, 4:24*pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
On Jan 12, 3:25 pm, Keith Dysart wrote: But, of course, V(t) and I(t) are general functions of time. In particular, the discusion was regarding pulses. Pulses can be analyzed as Fourier sinusoidal functions with multiple frequencies. Point is that you could have saved a month of grief on this newsgroup if you had initially said your power equation applied only to real voltage and real current. If you had done that, nobody would have argued with you. An earlier post suggested that you "had got it", but these last two posts leave me wondering. P(t) = V(t) * I(t) where V(t) and I(t) are functions describing the actual measureable voltage and current at a point on the line. Examples of V(t) would be V(t) = 10 V(t) = A cos(wt + a) These functions all yield real results since the voltage measureable at a point on the line is a real function of time. When the latter example is written in complex exponential form it becomes V(t) = Re[A*e^j(wt+a)] Re[] is not there because there is some imaginary part to be ignored, but because this is how one writes the function for V(t) in this notation. Thus Re[V(t)] is non-sensical since the Re[] is already in the expression describing the function. My apologies for not detecting this subtle bit of misleading thinking when I wrote my earlier reply. ...Keith |
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