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Roy Lewallen wrote:
[..] And you're right. I apologize. "Orthogonal" usually refers to spatial orientation, so when you said that he said they're orthogonal, my reaction was that it's correct. But I didn't look at the web page. I see by looking at it that he also says the two are in time quadrature, which of course is incorrect as you say. His "fundamental laws of physics" are certainly different from everyone else's. Thanks for providing a good example of the pitfalls of relying on the web for information. Again my apology. You do indeed have it right. Incidentally, it's not possible for a medium to have a purely reactive (imaginary) Z0 at any non-zero frequency. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Thanks very much, Roy. It was probably my mistake, using the word "Orthogonal" when quadrature would probably have worked better. Can you explain your last sentence? Why does this happen? I have been following these threads with some interest, and I very much appreciate your analysis, as it adds greatly to my understanding. Thank you very much for taking the time to write so clearly. There is one point I still have trouble with. The concept of power flowing in standing waves where the superposition goes to zero, and yet the energy flow is unaffected and continues in opposite directions on either side of the null point. Anyway, I have googled until my fingers get sore, and I haven't found a good explanation of why this happens. Everyone says it is well understood from basic undergraduate theory, but the only references I can find are from graduate studies in Quantum Electrodynamics. This is not much help. So I have to form some image in my mind of why these waves do not interact. Here is a partial pictu 1. Electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light in whatever medium they are in. For them to interact, there must be some advance information they are about to collide. But that would require transferring information faster than the speed of light, which is forbidden. 2. The fields in electromagnetic waves are at right angles to the direction of propagation. There is no longitudinal component, and therefore the waves have no advance warning they are about to collide. There is no vector component that is common to both that would allow any interaction, so there is no way this can happen. 3. Photons carry no charge. They are not deflected by electrostatic or electromagnetic fields, and do not interact with other photons. Electromagnetic waves are made up of photons. Since photons do not interact, EM waves also do not interact with each other. The above concepts seem to make sense, and allow me to get some sleep at night. Can you tell me if they are valid, and if there are other ways of explaining this phenomenon? Regards, Mike Monett |
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