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It's true that even a simple DC battery circuit can be described in
terms of incident and reflected power, SWR, and reflection coefficients, but that's very unrealistic when trying to conceptually understand what's going on. I suppose a point that I'm making is that understanding how to match a source with a load doesn't have much to do with reflections and standing waves although, again, it can certainly be described (unrealistically) that way. Take the case of a transmitter and an antenna connected together with a two-port black box between them, and that black box happened to contain a transmission line. That unseen transmission line has standing waves and reflections (assuming a mismatched condition), losses, etc. all contained within the box. However, the transmitter only sees a steady state complex impedance when looking into the box (at a single frequency). Obviously there's some conjugate matching that needs to take place for maximum power transfer, but there are no reflections or standing waves involved outside the box -- unless transmission line stubs are used for matching. In short, transmission lines have reflections and standing waves, and as a "black box" they affect how the load is seen by the source. But extending the power reflection concept outside of that black box only confuses things, even though it works mathmatically. Al Cecil Moore wrote in message ... alhearn wrote: Herein lies one of the big problems with the "reflection" definition, conceptually. That's why I often resort to a signal generator with a circulator/load to illustrate my point. That signal generator *is* a constant power source. Therefore, what is commonly called "reflected power" is power that never leaves the transmitter and is dissipated as heat by the transmitter's internal 50 ohm impedance (if the transmitter's design doesn't prematurely shut down first). You can mount an argument that if the source doesn't see its source impedance, then there is a reflection at that internal mismatch. But that's not what is commonly called reflected power. When we talk about reflected power on this newsgroup, we are usually referring to the forward power rejected by a mismatch between the transmission line Z0 and the antenna impedance (associated with mismatch loss). In a typical ham radio antenna system, the "lost" reflected power is forced to engage in destructive interference at the tuner and thus joins the forward power wave. |
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