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Old October 20th 04, 06:59 PM
Jim Kelley
 
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Tom Donaly wrote:
Next, Cecil, you're going to be talking about a "current gradient"
and a "scalar current field." Here's a question for you, Cecil, and
Richard Harrison, and Yuri, too: how do you take the gradient of
the current at a point on a transmission line, and, if were possible
to do so, what is the physical significance of the result?
73,
Tom Donaly, KA6RUH


The standing wave current profile along, for example, a quarter wave
radiator is a cosine function. The gradient then would be the
derivative of the cosine function which is a -sine function.

73, ac6xg

 
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