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Jim Kelley wrote:
. . . Voltages on a transmission line do not determine reflection coefficients. Reflection coefficients are determined by characteristic impedances, not virtual ones. 73, Jim AC6XG I disagree with this. When applied to transmission lines, the (voltage) reflection coefficient is, as far as I can tell, universally defined as the ratio of reflected to forward voltage to reverse voltage at a point. So a reflection coefficient can be, and often is, calculated for every point along a line, not just at discontinuities or points of actual reflection. This can be done with nothing more than the knowledge of the values of forward and reflected voltages at the point of calculation. As it turns out, the value of the reflection coefficient at any point will be equal to (Z - Z0) / (Z + Z0), where Z is the impedance seen looking down the line toward the load at the point of calculation. I'm very leery of the use of "virtual" anything, since it often adds an unnecessary level of confusion. But if I were to calculate a reflection coefficient at some point along a continuous line, I could replace the remainder of the line and the load with a lumped load of impedance Z, and maintain exactly the same reflection coefficient and forward and reverse traveling waves in the remaining line. I wouldn't object, then, if someone would say that there was a "virtual impedance" of Z at that point when the line was intact, since all properties prior to that point are unchanged if a lumped Z of that value is substituted for the remainder. (I personally wouldn't call it "virtual" -- I'd just call it the Z at that point, since it's the ratio of V to I there.) The point is that the reflection coefficient was the same before and after the substitution of the remaining line with a real lumped Z. Before the substitution, reflection was occurring at the load. After, the reflection is occurring at the new, substituted Z load. Yet the reflection coefficient and traveling waves remain the same on the remaining line. A reflection coefficient isn't the cause of anything. It's simply a calculated quantity used for computational and conceptual convenience. Only an impedance discontinuity causes reflections, but we can calculate a reflection coefficient at any point we choose, with its value being well defined and unambiguous. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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