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Cecil,
Thanks. You just validated my point. Kraus absolutely does not use component currents for any serious analysis; he uses only total current. Likewise, it appears that Balanis is merely waving his hands as well. The quote you provided comes from Chapter 10, on traveling wave antennas, not from a chapter on simple dipole antennas. Does he actually load these components into equations and carry out the analysis in detail? Subcomponents of the current may be useful for handwaving explanations, but they are not superior to the standard net current model. Any modeling results must agree with the standard model (widely used for more than 100 years) or else the simple handwaving model is likely to be bogus. Soooo, we are back to the beginning. There is minimal current phase shift in a dipole or monopole antenna, certainly nothing like the the 30 to 60 degree "replacement" phase shift you have been claiming. There is no mysterious "current drop". Any reduction in measured (or modeled) current can (and must) be accounted by shunt currents. What's left? Bye, Gene W4SZ Cecil Moore wrote: Check out my tag line, Gene. Balanis says we can use the component currents If and Ib to analyze a standing-wave antenna. Kraus says essentially the same thing when he says: "A sinusoidal current distribution may be regarded as the standing wave produced by two uniform (unattenuated) traveling waves of equal amplitude moving in opposite directions along an antenna." This was in regards to the "Fields of a thin linear antenna with a uniform traveling wave." |
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