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William E. Sabin wrote:
David Robbins wrote: "Peter O. Brackett" wrote in message link.net... yes, i still hold that they are different. they are from completely different realms of electromagnetics. in the transmission line reflection coefficient you are working with a distributed system that is modeled with wave equations. there are delays, waves travel and reflections return after a finite delay. in your example you have coerced the voltage and current waves to be the same in the transmission line, but that is not the same as modeling the line itself. In simulation programs, transmission lines are solved for their two-port parameters, and are then treated as lumped circuits in the actual simulation, just like any lumped-element circuit. Which is a good way to do it. I notice that in the ARRL Antenna Book, 19th edition , on page 24-7, it is stated with definite finality that the reflection coefficient formula uses the complex conjugate of Zo in the numerator. I also understand that this has been established by a "well-trusted authority". I have used Mathcad to calculate rho and VSWR for Reg's example, for many values of X0 (imaginary part of Z0) from -0 to -250 ohms. The data follows: Note: |rho1*| is conjugated rho1, SWR1 is for |rho1*|, |rho2| is not conjugated and SWR2 applies to |rho2| X0.......|rho1*|..SWR1.....|rho2|..SWR2 -250..... 0.935...30.0.....1.865...-3.30 -200..... 0.937...30.8.....1.705...-3.80 -150..... 0.942...33.3.....1.517...-4.87 -100..... 0.948...37.5.....1.320...-7.25 -050..... 0.955...43.3.....1.131...-16.3 -020..... 0.959...47.6.....1.030...-76.5 -015..... 0.960...48.4.....1.010...-204 -012..... 0.960...48.9.....0.997....+/- infinity -010..... 0.960...49.2.....0.990....+305 -004..... 0.961...76.3.....0.974....+76.3 0000..... 0.961...50.9.....0.961....+50.9 The numbers for not-conjugate rho are all over the place and lead to ridiculous numbers for SWR. It is also obvious that for a low-loss line it doesn't matter much. But values of rho greater than 1.0, on a Smith chart correspond to negative values of resistance (see the data). Something is wrong here that we are overlooking. The use of conjugate rho is so much better behaved that I have some real doubts about some of our conclusions on this matter. What about it folks? How can we get to the bottom of this? Bill W0IYH The equation in the ARRL Antenna Book is identical to the equation for rho that is in the Power Wave literature (see Gonzalez and also see Kurokawa). Also, numerous literature sources describe how an open-circuit generator with internal impedance Z0, connected directly to load ZL, is actually a power wave setup that leads to a rho formula that is identical to the formula in the ARRL Antenna Book. When calculating rho, it is not necessary to fool around with the wave equations, because frequency is constant and everything is steady-state. Bill W0IYH |