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Roy Lewallen wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: Gene Fuller wrote: Cecil, You can't be serious! This is basic stuff found in virtually any intermediate level E&M textbook. If you can provide me with a reference that says, wave cancellation can cause reflection of the canceled waves, I will be eternally grateful. I have been able to find references that imply such for light waves, but I have not found one that comes right out and says it for either light waves or RF waves. I'm afraid that your difficulty in finding a reference is simply due to its not being so. Well, Gene says it is really basic stuff (not worthy of a second thought). Which is it? - Not worthy of a second thought or seminal work? If it is indeed so, it appears that your forthcoming QEX article will be a seminal work, as the first published work to explicitly state that this phenomenon indeed happens (outside of countless newsgroup postings to that effect). Assuming you understand the physics which causes it to happen, I'd think that a professional publication would be a much more appropriate forum than QEX for such an important work. Have you tried any of the IEEE publications? Nope, I haven't. I've retired from being a pro. Now I am just an amateur. When two coherent waves traveling in the same path and direction are 180 degrees out of phase, they disappear from existence in that original direction of travel, i.e. they undergo wave cancellation. When they are confined to a transmission line with only two directions, the flow of energy in the original direction ceases. There is no other choice but for the energy in the two cancelled waves to be conserved and to reverse direction and start flowing in the opposite direction. That, my friend, is a reflection. How can you possibly believe that the energy in cancelled waves is not conserved? So to your list of shorts, opens, and pure reactances being able to cause 100% reflection, you can add wave cancellation. Note that wave cancellation cannot happen at a single load with a single incident wave. It can only happen at points where there are waves flowing in opposite directions, e.g. match points on transmission lines with reflections and at sources subjected to reflections. Please don't argue that you have never seen such. Anyone who has looked at an oil film on water has witnessed reflections caused by interference and wave cancellation. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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