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Richard,
I am not sure why you think there is a violation of Kirchhoff. The current law is unchanged. The analysis of the voltage law is much more complicated, but not incorrect. The situation is not really any different than the use of retarded potentials for radiation. One must carefully keep track of the loop voltages with consideration for time and space differences, but there is no fundamental difference in the physics. For distributed networks, the Kirchhoff voltage calculation is difficult (intractable). It is not impossible, but it is unnecessary due to the existence of the much more friendly transmission line formulations. 73, Gene W4SZ Richard Clark wrote: On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 15:10:22 GMT, Gene Fuller wrote: However, due to the distributed time and space considerations in a transmission line, the "circuit" model is mathematically intractable for many applications. AKA Violation of Kirchhoff |
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