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Jim Kelley wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: So why does an attenuated voltage drop while a current, attenuated by exactly the same percentage, doesn't drop? Depends on whether 'a' is in series or in shunt. It would be too much of a coincidence for 'a', the attenuation factor, to be the same whether in series or in shunt. Most of the attenuation at HF is due to I^2*R losses, a series event. Transmission lines are distributed networks involved with EM wave energy transmission. I^2*R losses can cause a decrease in current just as it can cause a decrease in voltage. The sequence of events is obvious. 1. The RF voltage drops because of I^2*R losses. 2. The proportional E-field decreases because of the voltage drop. 3. Since the E-field to H-field ratio is fixed by Z0, the H-field decreases as does the ExH power in the wave. 4. Since the RF current is proportional to the H-field, the current decreases by the same percentage as the voltage. The chain of cause and effect is obvious. The current decreases because of I^2*R losses in the transmission line which is a distributed network, not a circuit. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
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