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On Jun 28, 7:20 pm, K1TTT wrote:
On Jun 28, 10:50 pm, Keith Dysart wrote: On Jun 28, 5:11 pm, K1TTT wrote: On Jun 27, 11:59 pm, Keith Dysart wrote: I suppose, but then you have to give up on P(t)=V(t)*I(t), generally considered to be a rather fundamental equation. very fundamental, and very restricted. only good for one point in space at one time, and for one pair of voltage and current measurements... can not be applied to separate waves that are superimposed, only to the final total voltage and current at the measurement point at that instant. True, but others reject it completely. In your example, the RF energy does seem to disappear and re-appear, when tracked on a moment by moment basis. when doing conservation of energy you must include the WHOLE system! it doesn't work on one section of a transmission line any more than it works for the infamous undergraduate teaser: take a refrigerator, put it in a perfectly insulated room, and then open the doors... what happens to the temperature in the room? The teaser is amusing, but hardly relevant. In my example, all of the energy is tracked. Or, I invite you to point out that which was overlooked. Cecil has not found any and would rather prattle on about the difference between energy and power than actually understand. of course its relevant... so what happens to the temperature? Any energy that might raise the temperature is accounted for in the source and load resistors, so I still suggest that no energy sources or sinks have been missed. Well, it would help if you could actually find and articulate a flaw inhttp://sites.google.com/site/keithdysart/radio6. ...Keith that site is rather worthless... you say Vs can be used to get the time reference for the other signals, but time is a variable, as is space. you seem to have a snapshot of a bunch of sine waves on an angular scale, but is that scale time or distance? Time, of course. I agree, though, it is not as clear as it could have been. It helps a bit if you look at Cecil’s schematic. Still, it is complicated and will probably take some effort to understand. It would probably be better to start with the step wave example offered previously in another post and copied below for convenience: example I am not sure where you think there is an error. Perhaps you can point them out in the following example: Generator: - 100V step in to an open circuit - 50 ohm source impedance Line: - 50 ohm - open circuit Generator is commanded to produce a step. This will produce 50 V and 1 A at the line input which will propagate down the line. The open end of the line has a reflection co-efficient of 1.0. Just before the 50 V step reaches the end of the line, the whole line will be at 50 V and 1 A will be flowing everywhere. The 50 V step hits the end and is reflected, producing a 50 V step (on top of the 50V already there) which propagates back to the generator. In front of the 50 V step, the current is still 1 A (which provides the charge necessary to produce the reverse propagating 50 V step. Behind the step, the current is 0. When the reverse 50 V step (which is actually a step from 50V to 100V) reaches the generator, the source impedance matches the line impedance so there is no further reflection. The line state is now 100V and 0A all along its length. The settling time was one round-trip. The generator is still producing the step, so the forward step voltage wave is still 'flowing' and being reflected so there is still a reflected step voltage wave, each of 50 V. Since the generator open circuit voltage is 100 V and the line voltage is now 100 V, current is no longer flowing from the generator to the line. Does this agree with your understanding? /example ...Keith this is different than what you claimed before. on june 17th you claimed: If(t) = 50/50 = 1a Ir(t) = 50/50 = 1a now you say current is no longer flowing. i will object to you saying the voltage 'wave' is still flowing. The line is at a constant 100v, there is no current, there can be no em wave without current AND voltage, therefore voltage can not be flowing. I think I detect a bit of a problem originating with definitions. Start by considering that old stalwart from the text books: the infinite transmission line. For convenience, the characteristic impedance is 50 ohms and at the left end is attached a generator with a 50 ohm source impedance. The transmission line extends to the right forever, and this time the generator produces a sinusoid. Turn on the generator and it starts to produce a sinusoidal wave. For greater certainty in the description let us say that the function which describes the wave is: V(t) = 100 cos(wt) where w is the ascii excuse for omega, the angular frequency. Because the line is accepting this signal and transporting it away from the generator, the voltage distribution on the line is also a sinusoid, but spatially distributed along the line. We can visualise this spatially distributed sine wave as moving along the line and thus we have the term travelling wave. If we run fast enough along the line we can get to a point where the signal has not yet arrived and the line is at 0V, and if we wait, the sine wave will eventually arrive and we will observe the same sinusoidal spatially distributed voltage pattern moving along the line. We can run the experiment with the generator producing other functions of time and we would observe the same function spatially distributed along the line and moving. A generator producing a square wave will produce a square wave voltage distribution moving along the line. A generator producing pulses will result in pulses moving along the line. A voice signal will result in a complicated voltage pattern moving along the line. This holds for any wave, V(t), produced by the generator. But most lines are not infinite. What happens when the line is terminated? Most texts will explain that if a section of line is terminated in its characteristic impedance, that section will behave as if it was connected to a line that continued forever. That is, the observations on that section will be no different than if the line went on and on and on. Thus in that section we would observe the moving sine, square, pulse, or whatever wave, but, we can no longer run far down the line to find a place where the wave has not yet arrived, since the line has been truncated. Now what happens if our section of line is open-circuited? The wave reflection model allows us to compute that the reflection coefficient (rc) will be 1. This means that if a forward travelling voltage wave, Vf(t), encounters the open circuit, it will be reflected as a reverse wave, Vr(t). Mathematically Vr(t) = rc * Vf(t) Going back to our waveforms, this is most readily visualised with pulses where the repetition rate is low enough that only one pulse is on the line at a time. The pulse can be seen to travel down the line, hit the end and travel in the reverse direction back to the generator. What happens when the pulse gets back to the generator? Well the generator was specified to have a source impedance that was the same as the line characteristic impedance, so the behaviour on the section of line will be exactly the same as if the line continued forever. There is no reflection, and we can forget about the pulse. The wave reflection model also tells us that the voltage at any point on the line will be V(t) = Vf(t) + Vr(t) where Vf(t) is the voltage from the forward wave at that point on the line and Vr(t) is the voltage from the reverse wave at that point on the line. For pulses, where there is only one pulse on the line at a time, this is easy to visualise, but for continuous signals, the voltage distribution on the line is now the sum of the forward and reverse travelling waves and for the most part, the forward and reverse travelling waves are no longer easily visible. For example, with a sine wave, the resulting voltage distribution on the line is the time varying, so called, standing wave. It is important to note that even though the original travelling waves are no longer visible in the spatial distribution of the voltage on the line, the travelling wave continues to be provided by the generator, it travels to the end of the line where it is reflected and this reverse wave travels back to the generator where it behaves as if the line continued forever because the line is terminated by its characteristic impedance. Recall that all of this holds for any Vf(t) produced by the generator. So what happens with that original sticking point, the step function? Consider the infinite line again. The step is moving along the line. If we run far enough ahead, we can watch the step pass, but behind the step the voltage is constant. This makes it hard to visualise as a moving wave because there are no peaks and valleys to observe, but it is still moving. If in doubt, just run further down the line to observe the step pass again. Now if we terminate the line, we can no longer run on ahead to find the step, but the wave is still moving; we just can’t see it because of the constant nature of the wave after the step. With the open circuited line, the step function is reflected and travels as a reverse wave back to the generator. Once the step reaches the generator, just as happens for any other V(t) wave, the wave continues to move; it just is not visible. And the voltage at any point on the line can be correctly computed from V(t) = Vf(t) + Vr(t) Another way to think of this is to produce the step wave in a different manner. Start with a pulse wave. Then increase the pulse width until it approaches the pulse period. The variation in voltage can still be observed on the line. Then slowly increase the width until it is equal to the period. There is now no longer any variation in the wave to be observed, but the wave is still moving just as it was when the width was infinitesimally shorter than the period. Another view is to start with a square wave, then increase the period until it is much longer than the duration of the experiment. Over the duration of the experiment, no change in voltage will be observed, but it is a square wave. One could perform a Fourier transform on the square wave, treat all the constituent sine waves as travelling waves, work out the reflections for each, and sum them back. Exactly the same results will be obtained as will be for treating the step as a moving wave, even though there are no peaks and valleys to aid the visualisation. So I hope that I have persuaded you that it is completely valid to view a step function as a wave that continues to move (though it is hard to see) even after the step has passed. If not, re-read the above to locate the flaw in my argument. If you have been convinced, then we can get back to If(t) = 50/50 = 1a Ir(t) = 50/50 = 1a Consider a generator, 50 ohms, that produces a 50 V step in to 50 ohms. For this Vf(t) = 50V The line has a 50 ohm impedance, so If(t) = 50/50 = 1A This is the voltage and current that would be observed on the infinite or terminated line after the step passes. With the open circuit line, where the reflection coefficient is 1, the voltage will be reflected so that Vr(t) = 50V after the reverse step passes and Ir(t) = 50/50 = 1A Recalling that at any point on the line V(t) = Vf(t) + Vr(t) and I(t) = If(t) – Ir(t) we have, after the reverse step has returned to the generator, everywhere on the line: V(t) = 50 + 50 = 100V I(t) = 1 – 1 = 0A This is exactly as expected for a generator with an open circuit voltage of 100V and an open circuit line that has no current flowing. So the wave reflection model, with continuously forward and reverse waves, accurately describes the resulting observations on the line, even for a step wave. ....Keith |
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