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On Mar 30, 8:43*pm, Cecil Moore wrote:
Keith Dysart wrote: Perhaps you should complete part one so that it fully accounts for the energy flows before progressing to writing part two. Average is not a full accounting. Average is the only accounting that I consider to be important and the only accounting that I am going to do. I have added a disclaimer about instantaneous power to my Part 1 article. But the meaning of the disclaimer is not clear to the reader. You really need to restate your hypothesis to remove the possibility of misleading the reader. I would suggest something along the lines of "My hypothesis is that the average energy in the reflected wave is *numerically* equal to the increase in dissipation of the source resistor. It should be noted that this says nothing about whether the energy in the reflected wave is actually dissipated in the source resistor." That would be completely accurate and very unlikely to be misconstrued by the reader. I personally don't think that anyone else cares about instantaneous powers. I am sure some do not. But anyone interested in a full understanding does. If you need an instantaneous power article written, please feel free to write it yourself. I wish you luck but I personally consider it to be a waste of time. It is convenient when you just ignore the analysis that disproves your hypothesis. But it does not make the hypothesis more correct. ...Keith |
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