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On 8 jun, 09:54, Cecil Moore wrote:
On Jun 8, 6:04*am, Keith Dysart wrote: It is too bad, because the time domain is quite enlightening. Nothing wrong with a time domain analysis but analyzing problems whose basic premises violate the laws of physics is a waste of my time and yours. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com Good day. Sorry for the large extension of this post, my friends... My interests lie in understanding the behaviour of transmission lines to a level necessary to predict their basic behaviour. I did not find that I needed power flux to achieve this so I have not explored it. I suspect that you are right and it is an interesting topic. OK. I understand. I suposse you are more interested in "know how". When I complained about "the bench" at Richard, I was thinking on so many "know how" working years in my life. Today, I have more time to the "know WHYs" and I am trying to take my chance... :) A knowledge on Smith Chart (or software equivalent tools) using, solve most (if not all) of our ham practical and professional situations and provide enough basic theory for design purposes, I think in such sense I agree with you about it; however seems to me this topic thread have dealt a little more in the why's than the how's :) Look, several years ago many hams in my country -Argentine- came from technical schools, I become a ham in my seventeens (1969) when I was a very young electronic technician student. Here we have three fundamental educative levels: Primary, secondary (college?) and terciary (university). In secondary and terciary levels one of the first matters we study is physics. If we study electronics -on RF speciality-, only when we reach later study years of each level we learn transmission lines in the frequency domain with infinite lattices of RLCG, Telegrafer's equations solution, Smith charts, impedances, reactances, etc. If you do not go to study any RF especialities, the only knowledge you will have about transmission lines will be the physics ones. Physics models teach us the associated phenomena reffering basically to electromagnetic fields = we learn about, E field, H field, power and energy in more basics terms that frequency domain later more advanced studies. We do not learn typical AC models in basic physics (as you can see in Resnick-Hallyday books, for example, I can not give you college's references books because I study from local authors). In addition at very early physical mechanics courses we learn stationary and traveling waves, superposition principle and late, interference, in optics. Probably this is not the way to approaching to this topic that medium Ham employ because our natural ansiety to put the rig to work :D but seems to be a consensus about what is more basic and what more complex in formal pedagogic/understanding approaches to this matters. May be for that some of us tend to emphasize in directional power flux and other similar "ugly stuff" to analize transmission line questions, Perhaps for this reason it is easy and illustrative to me the Cecil's bridge car analogy about net energy flux, in addition, energy fluxes crossing areas results very intuitive to me because I can easily visualize (imagine) thousands of them hit and cross my body all the time. Sun light and infrared energy flux, light in houses, streets lights, sky diffused light, RF waves from broadcast and Hams, cellular phones, etc. Instead it is not so ease visualize in such intuitive context a single point with a permanent zero voltage (or E field, better) all the time. Measurement of interference phenomenom requires much more sofisticated and special reductive technics to simplify the problem. One of this technics it is, for example, voltage measurement on a transmission line point with a zero volt pure AC voltage node; but as Cecil et al said, a zero voltage point does not implicate not power flux crossing that point, that is a very known wave interference phenomenom, it is a little easy to visualize it if we remember that fields are "force fields" -fields are forces acting on testing devices- (charges, compass needles, etc), as we learnt in Coulomb laws. Fields being forces let us intuite that having two horses pulling a rock in right angles results in rock moving on a direction resulting of composition of that forces. Seem to be only one force acting in movement direction but are two!. also you can have both horses pulling in opposite directions, then we do not measure any movement and we could think there is not any force acting on the rock!, but our zero force measurement do not implicate there are not two horse pulling the rock! , zero net force it is different of zero force, I think we agree in that. I believe I undestand your reasoning: P=V*I, = not V, not P!, it is OK. But power not represent the internal system energy, power implicate "energy developed = work/time", you need energy (applied during certain time, then "power") to accelerate a charge, but the charge can have cinetic energy of its own; then, zero volt line point simply are a point where not any energy it is ADDED to the charges. not a point where there is not have (or not can have) preexistent electric energy (current) flowing; why zero volt net force field point would be stop travelling wave energy flow?; think of zero volt line point as a zero potential energy point, not acceleration in it, as the lowest part of a roller coaster... Incidentally, Poynting vector is defined as "speed of energy flux by unity of area", it is a different thing that power developed on interchange of energy phenomena such electric energy converted to heat or chemical reaction or movement, if we remember what we learn about P=V*I in Joule law (electric to heat transformation) it is a little more evident its transforming (not transport) energy context. Thus, transmited power its different than "developed power" in the other sense (perhaps here my translation not be clear enough). What is your opinion? Miguel Ghezzi LU6ETJ PS: I have some more things in my inkwell about models used on our issue but I have to leave it for future postings :) |
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