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Dave Shrader has kindly contacted me to tell me I was wrong with my
resistivity definition. Dave is right. The formula I was trying to remember is: Resistance = RESISTIVITY x length / area I goofed and I`m sorry. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
"Gene Fuller" wrote in message ... Cecil, You appear to misunderstand that it is essentially impossible to do anything with all of your interfering component waves except wave your hands and flap your gums about them. you must be new here... that is what these guys do all day long! |
Hi Walt,
I am quite surprised and disappointed that you commented on my review of Steve Best's QEX articles in the manner quoted he On Thu, 11 Mar 2004 09:17 Walter Maxwell wrote: And it also totally supports your argument with Gene, who apparently doesn't get it either, because I heard him claim that Steve's article is one of the most illuminating and definitive he's read. Unfortunately, Steve's QEX article is total BS. Walt, kW2DU ************************************************** * Here is an exact quote from my email to you dated January 31, 2003. Hi Walt, I'm back. I have re-read the Best QEX article, I have read your rebuttal carefully, and I have re-read parts of Reflections II. I have to say that I believe the QEX article in question is fair and correct. I cannot find a single flaw in it. I have documented my response by adding comments to the rebuttal draft you sent me the other day. My comments are in red. In summary, I think the QEX article is completely correct in items 1, 2, and 3. I am less comfortable about making any sort of definitive statement on item 4. I have been aware of the controversy for some time, and I am somewhat dumbfounded by the entire matter. I tacitly believed that all of this stuff had been fully defined, understood, and non-controversial for many decades. Certainly there is no new science in classical transmission line theory in 2003. To the best of my understanding this entire matter has somewhat the character of a tempest in a teapot. I have not found the slightest evidence that your model and Steve Best's model disagree in any measurable way. Clearly the insides of the models are different, but the visible, measurable parts are not. Is there a single case in which Best's model gives the wrong answer by any measurement technique? Is there a single case in which your model gives the wrong answer by any measurement technique? From a visualization and conceptualization point the models are quite different. You note that many engineers appreciate your model as it provides them a good understanding of the reflection behavior. To be brutally honest, I prefer the approach taken by Best. I like the equations to balance explicitly, and I am less comfortable with relying on concepts like virtual opens and shorts. Again, I do not see any physically measurable difference in the output from the models. The rest is philosophy. snip of irrelevant pleasantries ************************************************** * Soooo, Walt, what did I write that elicited your unkind comment? 73, Gene W4SZ |
Cecil,
OK, I will 'see' your references and 'raise' my bid to Born and Wolf "Principles of Optics", 7th edition. I recommend section 1.6, "Wave propagation in a stratified medium. Theory of dielectric films". This section runs from page 54 to page 74, and it describes in full detail everything you would want to know about propagation of waves in multilayered structures. There is a disclaimer in the introduction to this section which says, "For the treatment of problems involving only a small number of films it is naturally not necessary to use the general theory, and accordingly we shall later describe an alternative and older method based on the concept of multiple reflections." The reference is to section 7.6 "Multiple-beam interference", which runs from page 359 to page 409. Similar sections are included in the 6th edition of this book, on pages 51 to 70 and 323 to 367 respectively. I am sure you can find one or both of these editions in the TAMU library. I prefer the 7th edition, as it seems easier on the eyes. If you choose not to actually read these references I will tell you that the first section is a full-blown Maxwell's equations treatment, and the second section employs an interfering wave treatment. What I find interesting is that there is not one mention of bouncing energy waves or waves that have disappeared but their energy lives on. If you read your favorite Melles-Griot material carefully without adding your own spin (how else could it be, etc.) you will see that they do not discuss bouncing energy waves either. You will notice that M-G say the energy "appears" in the transmitted wave. This is good, since we like to believe conservation of energy is maintained. M-G do not discuss the mechanism. All of the stuff about bouncing energy rejoining the forward wave is purely in your imagination. I think I have finally figured out the root of the disagreement. Your approach is similar to a one-trick pony. You have latched onto the concept of interference to the exclusion of any other valid approach. As a consequence it becomes *necessary* to imagine such things as bouncing energy waves. The Maxwell's equations approach does not require this sort of crutch. Try it, you might like it. I am quite familiar with both analytical methods, and I am comfortable in using either one. The key is understanding when a given analytical technique will be the most useful, most direct, most intuitive, and so on. I have nothing against interference, but its misapplication is like using a pipe wrench to drive a nail while a hammer is right at hand. 73, Gene W4SZ Cecil Moore wrote: If that is beyond your comprehension, just say so but, in reality, those interfering component waves obey the laws of physics as explained in _Optics_, by Hecht and on the Melles-Groit web page: http://www.mellesgriot.com/products/optics/oc_2_1.htm |
On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 03:51:35 GMT, Gene Fuller
wrote: The Maxwell's equations approach does not require this sort of crutch. Try it, you might like it. Hi Gene, It's not about being correct, it's about "truth" and proving the great satan Steve wrong. When you've been flashed fried, facts don't matter anymore. ;-) 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 03:51:35 GMT, Gene Fuller wrote:
Cecil, OK, I will 'see' your references and 'raise' my bid to Born and Wolf "Principles of Optics", 7th edition. I recommend section 1.6, "Wave propagation in a stratified medium. Theory of dielectric films". This section runs from page 54 to page 74, and it describes in full detail everything you would want to know about propagation of waves in multilayered structures. There is a disclaimer in the introduction to this section which says, "For the treatment of problems involving only a small number of films it is naturally not necessary to use the general theory, and accordingly we shall later describe an alternative and older method based on the concept of multiple reflections." The reference is to section 7.6 "Multiple-beam interference", which runs from page 359 to page 409. Well, Gene, you apparently deny that 'bouncing' waves exist. So what exactly are 'multiple reflections'? Similar sections are included in the 6th edition of this book, on pages 51 to 70 and 323 to 367 respectively. I am sure you can find one or both of these editions in the TAMU library. I prefer the 7th edition, as it seems easier on the eyes. If you choose not to actually read these references I will tell you that the first section is a full-blown Maxwell's equations treatment, and the second section employs an interfering wave treatment. So I now ask, if your selected reference discusses interfering wave treatment and multiple reflections in the explanation of impedance matching, then why do you consider Cecil's position concerning reflected energy joining the forward wave as purely in his imagination? Seems as if you're wearing opaque glasses backward. What I find interesting is that there is not one mention of bouncing energy waves or waves that have disappeared but their energy lives on. If you read your favorite Melles-Griot material carefully without adding your own spin (how else could it be, etc.) you will see that they do not discuss bouncing energy waves either. You will notice that M-G say the energy "appears" in the transmitted wave. This is good, since we like to believe conservation of energy is maintained. M-G do not discuss the mechanism. All of the stuff about bouncing energy rejoining the forward wave is purely in your imagination. Imagination, indeed! I think I have finally figured out the root of the disagreement. Your approach is similar to a one-trick pony. You have latched onto the concept of interference to the exclusion of any other valid approach. As a consequence it becomes *necessary* to imagine such things as bouncing energy waves. The Maxwell's equations approach does not require this sort of crutch. Try it, you might like it. Gene, multiple reflections in wave mechanics are the basic tools that accomplish impedance matching--no way are the reflected waves any sort of a crutch. There can be NO matching of different impedances without reflections. How could there not be reflections when electromagnetic waves encounter a diffferent impedance when going from medium to another? I am quite familiar with both analytical methods, and I am comfortable in using either one. The key is understanding when a given analytical technique will be the most useful, most direct, most intuitive, and so on. I have nothing against interference, but its misapplication is like using a pipe wrench to drive a nail while a hammer is right at hand. Wave interference is the total basis for all impedance-matching operations. There is no misapplication of wave interference, and your assertion that the pipe wrench and hammer apply here is absurd. If you have a copy of QEX for Mar/Apr 1998 please review an article there concerning this subject. It just might give you the opportunity of looking at the concept from a somewhat different perspective. Walt, W2DU |
Gene Fuller wrote:
If you choose not to actually read these references I will tell you that the first section is a full-blown Maxwell's equations treatment, and the second section employs an interfering wave treatment. Everyone already knows the end results so Maxwell's equations offer no clues as to what actually happens in reality in the process of yielding those results. The interfering wave treatment is the only one, to the best of my knowledge, that yields clues as to the physical events involved. What happens has to obey the laws of physics including the laws of interference and conservation of energy and momentum. What I find interesting is that there is not one mention of bouncing energy waves or waves that have disappeared but their energy lives on. Gene, neither have I ever said anything about "bouncing waves". That is entirely a diversionary invention of yours. I have talked about reflected waves, Dr. Best has talked about reflected waves, and the Melles-Griot web page also talks about reflected waves. You are on record as asserting that reflected waves don't exist thus disagreeing with Melles-Griot. Have you ever used a TDR? If you read your favorite Melles-Griot material carefully without adding your own spin (how else could it be, etc.) you will see that they do not discuss bouncing energy waves either. Neither have I ever discussed "bouncing energy waves". That is your very own diversion from subject matter that you are apparently loathe to discuss. The Melles-Griot web page indeed does discuss destructive interference between two rearward-traveling reflected waves, the "lost" energy of which, winds up traveling in the forward direction toward the load. You will notice that M-G say the energy "appears" in the transmitted wave. Is that anything like angels appearing to the Virgin Mary? :-) "Appears", in the M-G context means "coherently joins". How does the "lost" energy from two interfering rearward-traveling waves appear in the forward-traveling transmitted wave energy without changing direction? Please don't just ignore that question. Dr. Best dismissed the rearward-traveling energy and simply magically re- introduced it into the forward wave. Do you also believe in magic? Dr. Best also denied that interference had anything to do with matching when, in reality, interference has everything to do with matching. A Z0-match point in a feedline with reflections is impossible without interference. Why didn't you object to Dr. Best's use of "bouncing waves"? Here's a quote from his article: "When the system reaches the steady state, the two rearward- traveling waves at the match point are 180 degrees out of phase with respect to each other and a complete cancellation of both waves occurs." That is a true statement and Melles-Griot and I have said exactly the same thing. The question is: What happens to the energy in those cancelled waves? It doesn't continue on toward the source. It doesn't stand still. It is not destroyed. Can you guess what happens to it? Melles-Griot says it appears in the forward wave. Do you think "appears" is a magic word? Can energy suddenly appear from nowhere? Hecht in _Optics_ tells us that added constructive interference energy always originates from and is equal in magnitude to the lost destructive interference energy. Anything else violates the conservation of energy principle. The answer is obvious. Destructive interference energy left over from the cancellation of two rearward-traveling reflected waves changes direction and appears in the forward wave. There is simply no where else for it to go. I think I have finally figured out the root of the disagreement. Your approach is similar to a one-trick pony. You have latched onto the concept of interference to the exclusion of any other valid approach. Nope, I'm open for any other valid approach but nobody has furnished another one so far. I'm not interested in net answers. I'm interested in explaining the physical process within the accepted laws of physics. No magic or steady state short cuts accepted. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
Richard Clark wrote:
Gene Fuller wrote: The Maxwell's equations approach does not require this sort of crutch. Try it, you might like it. It's not about being correct, it's about "truth" and proving the great satan Steve wrong. When you've been flashed fried, facts don't matter anymore. ;-) Maxwell's equations yield answers but give no clue as to the detailed physical process involved. Since everyone already knows the answers, Maxwell's equations are no help at all in explaining the 1, 2, 3, ... step-by-step process. Here's a quote from Steve's article: "When the system reaches the steady state, the two rearward-traveling waves at the match point are 180 degrees out of phase with respect to each other and a complete cancellation of both waves occurs." I agree with that statement. But when I ask what happens to the energy in those two cancelled waves, all I get is silence. So Richard, what happens to the energy in those two cancelled waves? Destroyed? Bleeds off to a parallel universe? Routed through a black hole for constructive interference in the opposite direction? The answer is more than obvious. Maxwell's equations tell us that all the energy in a Z0-matched system winds up incident upon the load. That necessarily includes all the energy in the rearward-traveling cancelled waves. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
On Thu, 11 Mar 2004 23:26:43 -0600, Cecil Moore
wrote: Maxwell's equations yield answers but give no clue as to the detailed physical process involved. Clueless, hmm? Since everyone already knows the answers, All the answers and no clues, even more curious. Maxwell's equations are no help at all in explaining the 1, 2, 3, ... step-by-step process. You got more problems than clues and answers. Here's a quote from Steve's article Ah, the great satan having been invoked. How'd I peg that so square on the head? I agree with that statement. But when I ask what happens to the energy in those two cancelled waves, all I get is silence. That's all it merits, So Richard, what happens to the energy in those two cancelled waves? Destroyed? Bleeds off to a parallel universe? Routed through a black hole for constructive interference in the opposite direction? The answer is more than obvious. From those three alternatives drawn from a hat? Three card monte is a more honest game. You forgot the part about truth, justice and the american way.... Maxwell's equations tell us ... And here you told us that maxwell's equations were clueless, answers that described nothing and no help at all - unless they pass through your model. Well, I did say this was more entertaining than video on demand. Lower bandwidth too. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Regardless of impedances, with a sensibly zero-loss line it's quite obvious
ALL the power leaving the generator is dissipated in the load. There's nowhere else for the stuff to go. If any power is NOT dissipated in the load due to any cause then it never leaves the generator. What on earth have bouncing waves, virtual this that and the other got to do with it. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
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