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On Sun, 17 Aug 2003 13:56:11 GMT, tad danley
wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: I've tried to point out on this thread that although the feedpoint impedance is an impedance with the units of ohms, and the impedance of a plane wave in free space also has the units of ohms, they're not the same thing. This may not be a good analogy, but Specific Impulse of rocket motors helps me to remember that the 'units' of something have to be considered in the context of what is being measured. Specific impulse is a measure of the performance of a rocket motor. It measures the thrust obtained from a single kilogram of propellant burned in one second. The 'units' of Specific Impulse are seconds, but we're not measuring 'time'. It is a bad analogy--for the simple fact that in SI, the proper units of specific impulse are newton seconds per kilogram (N·s/kg), or the equivalent meters per second (m/s). Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
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