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Dr. Slick wrote:
"Therefore, the reflected voltage can never be greater than the input voltage for a passive network, and the reflection coeficient can never be greater than 1 for such a case." A reflection coefficient implies that transmission lines long in terms of wavelength may qualify as passive networks. At the open-circuit end of a long transmission line, current is interrupted by the open circuit. Having nowhere else to go, energy in the current wave must be accepted by the voltage wave which doubles on the spot. 2X the incident voltage is the sum of the voltage in the incident wave and the voltage in the new reflected wave as they are in-phase. The reflected voltage is no greater than the incident voltage. It is equal to the incident voltage. It`s the sum that doubles. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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