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Your use of "Dr. Best's conventions" only muddles the matter -- neither
I nor probably any of the other readers have any idea what this is. In any event, the numbers you produced are volts. I and many others know how to calculate forward and reflected voltages and currents, and their sums. What's at issue here is where the imaginary waves of average power are going, what they're bouncing off, and why. Correct me if I'm wrong, but power is generally expressed in watts, BTUs per hour, or other more arcane units, but not volts. Let's try again. The source is providing 40 watts, 32 watts of which is delivered to the transmission line. The transmission line is transferring this 32 watts of power to the load. In the transmission line, we can calculate that there's 50 watts of "forward power", and 18 watts of "reverse power". How much of that 18 watts of reverse power is going through the source resistor to reach the source to "engage in destructive interference"? What does it interfere with? How does whatever it interferes with get there? Does any of the power going either way, forward or reverse, get dissipated in the source resistor? If so, how much and why? If not, why not? In your "explanation", I don't see a single figure in watts, except that "we have 23 watts of constructive interference occuring toward the load". (Where is this interference occurring, that is, just where is the point "toward the load" located? Where did the 23 watt figure come from? How much of it is "forward power" and how much "reverse power"?) It's not an explanation at all, but hand-waving. And why do you insist that every combination of voltage source and resistor be a "Thevenin equivalent"? I suggest you go back and read your basic circuits texts, where you'll find that a Thevenin equivalent is a circuit which is used to substitute for a more complex linear circuit to simplify analysis. The electrical circuit components used here are not a substitute for anything. And there's no rule, except something apparently stuck firmly in your mind(*), which prohibits calculating the power dissipated in a resistor. No matter what it's connected to. I make no claim that the power dissipated by the resistor represents anything but the power dissipated in a resistor, that the resistor represents anything but a resistor and the voltage source anything but a voltage source. It is not a Thevenin equivalent, it's a painfully simple electrical circuit (alas, so simple it's difficult to obfuscate). It doesn't matter if you can trust a Thevenin equivalent for internal power calculations. There is no "internal power" here -- it's all out in the open where we can easily measure and calculate it. There's nothing in that "black box source" except an ideal voltage source. You can find a description of this fundamental electrical circuit component, including its complete terminal characteristics, in the circuit analysis textbook of your choice. People skilled in the art are able to calculate the power it produces by multiplying v across it times i flowing from it, and the average power by applying the mathematical definition of average to the calculated power. In this case, it produces an average of 40 watts (100 volts times 0.4 amp). So please tell us how many watts are going where, what they do when they get there, and why. If you can't, you don't have a theory at all. (*)Forgive me, I just can't shake the image of a certain memorable scene from the movie "The Long Kiss Goodbye" as I write this. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: Where's the "reverse power" going? Since we can calculate 23 watts of constructive interference occuring toward the load, using the conservation of energy principle as explained by Hecht in "Optics", we can deduce that the reflected power is engaged in destructive interference inside the black box source. Using Dr. Best's conventions: V1 = 32v, V2 = 18v, Vfor = 50v, Vref = 30v Any theory that doesn't work in a circuit composed of simple elemental electrical circuit elements is suspect to say the least. Are you saying yours doesn't? It works just fine. Pfor = P1 + P2 + constructive interference. But that still looks like a Thevenin equivalent to me, you know, the one we cannot trust for internal power calculations. |
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