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Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: Can you expand on why you think a TDR causes me difficulties? I can't think of any reasons. There's more than just voltage in those returned pulses. Yes, there is actually energy in them; easily computed at any point on the line by using the voltage and current waveform at that point. As for standing waves, I have no difficulties with forward and reflected voltage waves. They work perfectly fine. That takes care of the E-field. But do you think a wave can exist without an H-field? If not, the wave possesses energy, by definition. Energy flowing past a point is power. Your voltage-only waves violate the conservation of energy principle and the accepted laws of physics for EM waves. I somewhat sympathize with your dilemma. You have latched on to these forward and backwards waves for so long that you have started to believe that they are real and are therefore ascribing to them all the properties one would expect of a real EM wave such as current and power. Some of the authors you quote are not so convinced of their reality. Consider this quote from sometime back.... "Johnson continues: "We can regard the first term in this expression as the power associated with the forward-traveling wave, and the second term as the reflected power (associated with the rearward-traveling wave)"" As Peter points out in http://groups.google.ca/groups?q=reg...ing.net&rnum=5 the use of the word "regard" is critical to this passage. Mr Johnson seems well regarded and it seems likely that if he had intended the passage to mean "is" he would have used "is" rather than "regard". Just for a brief moment attempt to relax your hold on forward and reverse waves and think of the real voltages and currents on the line. These can be read with real voltmeters and real current meters. These are the voltages and currents that have to satisfy Es and Hs and energy flows and power. (And before Richard H pipes up about directional voltmeters, I take this opportunity to remind him that all a directional voltmeter actually detects is the real voltage and current at the point of insertion in the line; all the rest is computation based on the real voltage and current). Forward and reflected voltage and current waves are convenient ways of describing the real voltage and current distributions on the line, but that does not make them real. And the fact that they correctly predict the voltages and currents but sometimes fail to predict the power (when Z0 is not real, for example, but there are many other examples in simple circuit theory) is a strong indicator that they are a convenience and not a reality. Consider a mundane example in the physical world. You have a post supporting two clotheslines each leaving the post at 90 degrees. At 135 degrees from the clotheslines is a single guy wire to keep the post from bending. While for the purposes of analysis you can pretend that there are two guy wires and this will assist you in discovering the forces involved, never forget that there is really only one for otherwise you may be sorely surprised. Much like this example, the superposition of voltages is a useful analytical technique, but one must always be aware of its limitations or one will be lead quite astray. When one starts believing that the intermediate results represent reality, trouble begins. It is for this reason that quality authors use mushy words like "regard" when describing these intermediate results and not solid words like "is". ....Keith |