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Walter Maxwell wrote:
wrote: Steve at first said the energy in the canceled waves continues to flow toward the source without a voltage and current and that interference was not involved. He later changed his mind. All that should be archived on r.r.a.a on Google for the summer of 2001. Here's an excerpt. Steve said: "The total forward power increases as a direct result of the vector superposition of forward voltage and current. This DOES NOT require a corresponding destructive interference process ..." thus contradicting Hecht in _Optics_ who says any constructive interference process must be accompanied by an equal magnitude of destructive interference. Superposition of forward voltage and current? I'm sure he meant "superposition of forward voltages and superposition of forward currents." I don't recall Steve ever mentioning current. I think you are right re his article. The above quote is from an r.r.a.a. posting circa Summer 2001. What Steve apparently doesn't understand is how the energy direction is reversed when the rearward voltages and currents go to zero. "How" is not explained in any of the physics references. The closest physics reference that explains it is _Optics_, by Hecht where he says something like, at a point some distance from a source, constructive interference must be balanced by an equal magnitude of destructive interference. In a matched system, there is "complete destructive interference" toward the source side of the match point and "complete constructive interference" toward the load side of the match point. Energy is always displaced from the "complete destructive interference" event to the "complete constructive interference" event. (That's what you call a "virtual short" or "virtual open" capable of re-reflecting the reflected energy.) In s-parameter terms, b1 is the reflected voltage from port 1 toward the source. Port 1 is the input to a matched tuner (transmatch). The equation is: rearward-traveling voltage reflected toward the source b1 = s11(a1) + s12(a2) For b1 to be zero, i.e. zero reflections toward the source, s11(a1) must be equal in magnitude and opposite in phase to s12(a2). That is "complete destructive interference". Since there are only two directions, "complete constructive interference" must occur in the direction of b2 = s21(a1) + s22(a2) toward the load which is the opposite direction from b1. s11 is the port 1 reflection coefficient. a1 is the port 1 incident voltage. s21 is the port 2 to port 1 transmission coefficient. a2 is the voltage reflected from the load that is incident upon port 2. Match-Point Port1 Port2 Source------Z01--------x------------Z02------------load a1-- --a2 --b1 b2-- The only dissipative resistance in the amp is that which heats the plate. That dissipation is the only dissipation in the source--the other dissipation is only in the load. Why isn't the source impedance a negative resistance, i.e. a source of power Vs a positive resistance, a sink of power? -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |