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On Jun 18, 6:00*am, Keith Dysart wrote:
"Is this a situation where the computed reflected power represents something real?" because if it does not, the original question is moot. It certainly depends upon your definition of "power" and that definition is different between pure physics and RF engineering. One of the accepted definitions of "power" in "The IEEE Dictionary" contradicts the definition of "power" given in my college physics book. "The IEEE Dictionary" says that flowing energy passing a fixed measurement point is power, by definition. If there is anything at all that can be measured, it must necessarily contain energy. If the EM energy is moving, it is power, by IEEE definition. If you disagree, take it up with The IEEE. So the actual question that needs to be answered is: Does the electromagnetic reflected wave contain energy traveling at the speed of light in the medium? The answer is yes, being photonic in nature, an EM wave must necessarily contain an ExH power density and, consisting of photons, must necessarily be traveling at the speed of light in the medium. The EM wave will continue to travel in the direction of energy flow at the speed of light in the medium until it encounters an impedance discontinuity which causes a reflection and/or interference. There is really no difference in a forward wave and a reflected wave except for the direction of travel. They both contain an associated ExH power density. One can set up identical signal generators at each end of a transmission line to emulate forward and reflected waves. Which generator yields forward waves and which generator yields reflected waves? It doesn't really matter because direction is only a convention. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
#2
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On 18 jun, 12:26, Cecil Moore wrote:
On Jun 18, 6:00*am, Keith Dysart wrote: "Is this a situation where the computed reflected power represents something real?" because if it does not, the original question is moot. It certainly depends upon your definition of "power" and that definition is different between pure physics and RF engineering. One of the accepted definitions of "power" in "The IEEE Dictionary" contradicts the definition of "power" given in my college physics book. "The IEEE Dictionary" says that flowing energy passing a fixed measurement point is power, by definition. If there is anything at all that can be measured, it must necessarily contain energy. If the EM energy is moving, it is power, by IEEE definition. If you disagree, take it up with The IEEE. So the actual question that needs to be answered is: Does the electromagnetic reflected wave contain energy traveling at the speed of light in the medium? The answer is yes, being photonic in nature, an EM wave must necessarily contain an ExH power density and, consisting of photons, must necessarily be traveling at the speed of light in the medium. The EM wave will continue to travel in the direction of energy flow at the speed of light in the medium until it encounters an impedance discontinuity which causes a reflection and/or interference. There is really no difference in a forward wave and a reflected wave except for the direction of travel. They both contain an associated ExH power density. One can set up identical signal generators at each end of a transmission line to emulate forward and reflected waves. Which generator yields forward waves and which generator yields reflected waves? It doesn't really matter because direction is only a convention. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com Hello friends. good day for you. I am glad that I have not bothered with my joke, Keith! :) I was to do some comments to your and Roy posts, but I prefer to ask questions rather than giving personal opinions :) ..... Please Cecil, friend, do not mention photons and optics (do not bother me, don't worry), I believe you better play your game without such things. I know is like fighting with one arm tied, but I think you can, make an effort :) Please Owen explain to me what is "negative power". In the other thread you said = "The notion that reflected power is simply and always absorbed in the real source resistance is quite wrong. Sure you can build special cases where that might happen, but there is more to it. Thinking of the reflected wave as 'reflected power' leads to some of the misconception. Then I asked; "remember me what reflected power definition are you using here and expand the sentence idea". I did not ask for the quoting, I ask (again) for your concept of Reflected Power. I do not sure if you accept (or not) the very notion of reflected power as legitimate. The sentence it is not clear enough to me. Please, tell us if you accept the idea of two very directive electromagnetic waves from different sources flowing in opposite directions as carring independent energy (with different frequencies at first) and information, and the posibbility that energy be dissipated and/or transmitted by de opposite system and the information being recovered in both ends. If your answer is yes, then tell us if you conceive such similar system using a same wave guide to simultaneously vinculate both system. 73 - Miguel - LU6ETJ PS: Roy, friend, take it ease (is OK, or polite say "take it easy?), references to the article were only to complement (bring close?) some useful notions related, mentioning a possible common reference (my english books are few, old and possibly useless as reference nowadays) |
#3
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On Jun 18, 1:01*pm, lu6etj wrote:
Please Cecil, friend, do not mention photons and optics (do not bother me, don't worry), ... What do I do about people who assert that RF waves possess the ability to violate the known laws of EM wave physics? It doesn't matter what the frequency of an EM wave is, it must obey the laws of physics, two of which a 1. It cannot exist without a Poynting vector ExH power density. 2. It must necessarily move at the speed of light in the medium. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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