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Old July 1st 10, 01:37 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 572
Default what happens to reflected energy ?

On Jun 30, 11:29*am, Keith Dysart wrote:
Check the a0 coefficient in the Fourier transform. This represents
the DC component of the signal.


And the result is zero EM waves, either forward or reflected, and your
argument falls apart.

Without this, how would you deal with a signal such as
* V(t) = 10 + 2 cos(3t)


If the cosine term is zero, there are zero EM waves, either forward or
reflected, and your argument falls apart.

Incidentally, V(t) = 10, is a perfect way to prove that energy and the
time derivitive of energy are not the same thing and your argument
falls apart.

Alternatively, one can use the standard trick for dealing with
non-repetitive waveforms: choose an arbitrary period. 24 hours
would probably be suitable for these examples and transform from
there. Still, you will have zero frequency component to deal
with, but there will be some at higher frequencies (if you
choose your function to make it so).


Windowing doesn't generate EM waves where none exist in reality and
your argument falls apart.
--
73, Cecil, w5dxp.com
 
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