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Cecil Moore wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote: I didn't, and don't, claim to have derived a "power reflection coefficient". What I calculated was the ratio of reflected voltage to forward voltage at the load, and called its magnitude rho. If there's any step in the analysis that's unclear, I'll be happy to explain it in more detail. What you apparently calculated is s11 which is not always equal to rho. I calculated the ratio of the reflected to forward voltage at the load, and called its magnitude rho. If you have some other "rho" you want to argue about, please call it something else. What I have calculated is the ratio of reflected voltage to forward voltage at the load, no more and no less. No, you have calculated the ratio of one of the reflected voltages to one of the forward voltages. I believe you have calculated the ratio of s21*a1 to s12*a2 when you should be calculating the ratio of (s11*a1+s12*a2) to (s21*a1+s22*a2). You simply omitted half the terms. Please repeat my analysis, including the voltages or currents which were omitted, and explain why they should be included. I used standard steady state analysis, which infers one forward traveling voltage and current wave, and one reverse traveling voltage and current wave. Although the physical meaning of multiple traveling forward and reverse waves in steady state gets a little hazy to me, I don't think there's anything in principal that prevents you from assuming any number of forward and reverse voltage an current waves you'd like, calculating reflection coefficients for each pair, and adding them all up to get the total. It'll be interesting to see how you choose to do it. Of course, by choosing the pairs carefully, you can probably assure that the magnitude of the reflection coefficient for any pair doesn't exceed one. I'm not sure what that means or proves, but by all means have at it. . . . I'm sure that with enough s parameter and optics references, the facts of the matter can be satisfactorily obscured. It is you who is using an s-, h-, y-, z-, or other-parameter analysis and are inadvertently obscuring the facts. You left out half the voltage terms that should be included in the forward voltage and reflected voltage. Add all the reflected voltages together. Add all the forward voltages together. Divide the total reflected voltage by the total forward voltage. What the heck are you talking about? Just where in the analysis do you see any s, h, y, or z parameter? I did calculate an impedance here and there from voltages and currents -- is that some kind of a no-no in your eyes? Again, please show your analysis with the "missing" terms (that is, voltages and currents) included. Your view of how average powers add and travel do force that restriction. I'm looking forward to your alternative analysis, which shows the voltages, currents, and powers at both ends of the line while simultaneously satisfying your notion of how average powers interact. I think all that is built into your analysis. When you include all the necessary terms, I will be surprised if everything doesn't fall out consistently. Well, good. So show us. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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