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On Mar 5, 11:11*am, Cecil Moore wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: On Mar 4, 10:27 pm, Cecil Moore wrote: Keith Dysart wrote: Thus these examples do not demonstrate that the reflected power is dissipated in the source resistor. There are no reflections at the source so the reflected energy flows through the source resistor. There is no interference to redistribute any energy. There is no other place for the reflected energy to go. That is the conundrum, isn't it? And yet the analysis of instantaneous energy flows definitely shows that the reflected energy is not the energy being dissipated in the source resistor. Your analysis seems to be flawed. You are adding average power terms to instantaneous power terms which is mixing apples and oranges. I do not think that is the case. The expression for instantaneous power in Rs before the reflection (or, if you prefer, when a 50 ohm load is used), is Prs(t) = 50 + 50cos(2wt) It is trivial to compute the average of this since the average of a sine wave is 0, but that does not make the expression the sum of an average and an instantaneous power. As an exercise, compute the power in a 50 ohm resistor that has a 100 volt sine wave across at, that is V(t) = 100 cos(wt) You will find the result is of the form shown above. So when you add the instantaneous power in Rs before the reflection arrives with the instantaneous power from the reflection it will not sum to the instantaneous power dissipated in Rs after the reflection returns. Thus conveniently showing that for this example, the reflected power is not dissipated in Rs. ...Keith |
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