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Richard Harrison wrote:
Which is cause and which is effect? Often what is cause and what is effect can be interchanged. Volts across a resistor produce a current. Current in a resistor produces a voltage drop. Take your pick of cause or effect. A resistor's resistance *causes* a certain V/I ratio. If there exists a V/I ratio and no resistor, then the V/I ratio is the *cause* of the resistance (or impedance). In other words, a resistorless resistance cannot be the cause of anything. It is always an effect, often from interference, and is usually lossless. Note that anything that suffers from I^2*R dissipation is a resistor by this definition. That includes a piece of copper wire. A reflection may be caused by a phase reversal between voltage and current. We are past discussing reflections. The present argument is: Given two coherent waves traveling in the same path with the same magnitude and opposite phases, wave cancellation results from destructive interference. The laws of physics tells us that energy cannot be destroyed and if destructive interference exists, an equal magnitude of constructive interference is required to exist. The destructive interference in a Z0-matched system is toward the source. The constructive interference in a Z0-matched system is toward the load. The energy components involved in those two types of interference are traveling in opposite directions. The conclusion is obvious. The reflected energy involved in the wave cancellation process heads back toward the load just as explained on the Melles-Griot web page. That there is such a large well-organized good old boy conspiracy trying to hide these simple facts of physics speaks volumes about the sad state of amateur radio. http://www.mellesgriot.com/products/optics/oc_2_1.htm -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
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