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On Jun 24, 5:17*am, Keith Dysart wrote:
I assume you will claim that there is now “constructive interference” rather than the previous “destructive interference”, but the line conditions are the same. How does the “reflected power” know if it should construct or destroy? The phase is the same. That's easy to answer. The Norton equivalent is a current source so currents should be used in the calculations. The phase angles between the two current components are 180 degrees different from the phase angles between the two voltage components. If the interference between voltages is constructive, the interference between currents will be destructive. Hint: the reflected current phasor is 180 degrees out of phase with the reflected voltage phasor because of the direction of travel of the reflected wave. As a result of directional convention, the power in the reflected wave is negative. So destructive interference for forward/reverse voltages is constructive interference for forward/reverse currents and vice versa. An SWR voltage maximum (constructive voltage interference) is an SWR current minimum (destructive current interference) and an SWR voltage minimum (destructive current interference) is an SWR current maximum (constructive voltage interference). -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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