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Roy, W7EL wrote:
"Then does the "reflected power" flow back out, to go back down the transmission line, or does it contribute to the load dissipation?" It is a matter of time. Eventually, the reflected power is consumed by the load, though some of it requires several attempts to make it through the load. The load impedance opposes alternating current and thus the power it can produce. Reflected power is a misfit in the load. It does not conform to the E / I ratio of the load. There is a surplus E or I when there is a mismatch. This surplus E or I is reflected initiating the reflected wave traveling back toward the transmitter in the Zo of the line. E / I of the reflected wave must be the same as Zo enforces on the incident wave. Zo is usually a resistance (Ro) in useful lines. Zo is nearly the sq. rt. of L/C in useful lines because their series resistance and shunt conductance are insignificant. In such lines, Ro is lossless. If the transmitter is matched to the feedline to deliver maximum power, no reflected power gets through the matching network. This means that all reflected power is re-reflected by the network. So, the incident power consists of the transmitter output plus the re-reflected power. When this combo hits the load, the same percentage is absorbed by the load as that extracted when the first power out of the transmitter arrived at the load. The difference is that the incident power is now greater as it has grown by the amount of the reflected power. The re-reflected power is coming around again for another go at the load. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |