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Keith Dysart wrote:
OK. So it is your contention that "far from the antennas it is "interference" that causes the variation in field strength, but that on the line drawn between the two antennas some other mechanism is responsible". It is unethical to bear false witness about what I said. What I said was: On a line drawn between two *isotropic point sources*, when there are no reflections anywhere around, along that line, interference is impossible. The only thing existing along that line would be standing waves. There is no point along that line where the power density is not equal to the sum of the two sources, i.e. there is superposition but no interference along that line. If the elements are not point sources, interference is obviously possible at each and every point. I assume your example elements are not point sources so what you claimed was my contention was a false statement. If you can't win the arguments without making false statements about what I said, you lose anyway. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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