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Cecil Moore wrote:
Jim Kelley wrote: A column marked 'energy from source' is crucial to proving your point. Jim, I was hoping you were capable of multiplying 100 joules/sec by the number of seconds to get the total number of joules delivered to the system over time by the source. My 1000 joules after ten seconds is 100 joules/sec multiplied by ten seconds. Is that math too difficult for you? :-) :-) My contention is that it's too remedial. What you require is faith, not math. Is the source supposed to be a virtual fire hydrant of constant energy, or is it more like a real system? You seem to be assuming a constant 100 Joules per second input, regardless of the fact that the impedance the source sees is changing over the interval. That's not particularly realistic, hence a need for the empirical. But we could assume that the source is constant, and continue. Maybe you need a simpler example. Here it is: 100w SGCL source----one second long feedline----load The SGCL source is a signal generator equipped with a circulator and circulator load. The circulator load dissipates all the reflected power incident upon the signal generator. The signal generator outputs a constant 100 watts. The load is chosen such that the power reflection coefficient is equal to 0.5, i.e. half the power incident upon the load is reflected and half accepted by the load. This configuration reaches steady-state in 2+ seconds. After 2+ seconds, the forward wave contains 100 joules and the reflected wave contains 50 joules. 50 watts is being dissipated by the load and 50 watts is being dissipated by the circulator load. The source has output 150 joules of energy that has not been dissipated by the load or the circulator load. You have provided a lot of detail about where it all resides and in what proportions, but you still haven't shown how much energy a source would actually produce under such circumstances. Further, you're assuming that energy would move forward in a transmission line at a rate higher than the rate at which it is provided by the source. This is highly speculative and suspect. What we know for sure is, once steady state is achieved, energy is absorbed by the load(s) at the same rate at which it is generated, all the energy from the source goes to the load(s). Given that, there's very little impetus to believe that there need be any more than one second's worth of energy held within a one second long transmission line. It is therefore reasonable to contend that in the first scenario, 100 Joules of energy is held within the transmission line as it propagates toward the load. And in this latest scenario, 50 Joules is heading toward the load, and 50 is in the path to the circulator for a total of 100 Joules stored within the one second long transmission line. The way to prove that there's any greater surplus of energy held within the transmission line would be to make the energy vs. time measurements at each end of such a transmission line. Absent that, it's purposeful speculation. 73, AC6XG |
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