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Cecil Moore wrote:
Walter Maxwell wrote: But Cecil, take another look at Fig 6 on page 23-5 to note that those two waves arrive 180 out of phase at point A, which means only that the E and H fields cancel in the rearward direction only, resulting in a Zo match to the source. Yes, and that is exactly my point. EXACTLY the same thing happens to the E-fields and H-fields. That means exactly the same thing that happens to the rearward-traveling voltages also happens to the rearward-traveling currents. In my class in secondary school counseling, I learned a technique that might be helpful here. It's called, "Be the thing." Whatever it is that you are trying to understand, mentally become that thing. In other words, assume that you are the reflected current to find out what you would experience. Obviously, it is just a mental exercise, but one that I have found quite useful throughout the years. First, assume that you are the reflected voltage from a mismatched load. What do you encounter back at the match point? You encounter another reflected voltage with equal magnitude and opposite phase traveling in the same rearward direction. What happens to you? Your momentum in the rearward direction is reversed and your energy starts flowing toward the load. As a reflected voltage, based on your necessarily limited knowledge, you assume that you must have encountered a virtual short circuit. Second, assume that you are the reflected current from a mismatched load. What do you encounter back at the match point? You encounter another reflected current with equal magnitude and opposite phase traveling in the same rearward direction. What happens to you? Your momentum in the rearward direction is reversed and your energy starts flowing toward the load. As a reflected current, based on your necessarily limited knowledge, you assume that you must have encountered a virtual open circuit. There exists an apparent contradiction. A match point cannot simultaneously be a virtual short and a virtual open. How is the apparent contradiction resolved? Is there anything else in physics that can cause a total reflection of energy besides a short, open, or pure reactance? The answer is, "yes", and it happens all the time in the field of optics. In a system with only two directions of energy travel available, total destructive interference in one direction has to result in total constructive interference in the other direction. That's the way perfect non-glare thin-film coated glass works in the presence of a coherent single-frequency laser beam. -- 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! =----- |