Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
If you put the perfect voltage source and the source resistor into a box
and label it "Source", you have a Source whose impedance perfectly matches the transmission line. It's a Z0-matched system. The source impedance of my circuit is as simple as it can get. If you can't explain how it works, it reveals a deficiency of your theory; I can easily calculate the voltage, current, and power in any component at any moment of time. Without requiring bouncing waves of average power. Or a circulator. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: Isn't it possible to explain what happens to the "reverse power" without a circulator? It is certainly possible in a Z0-matched system where zero reflected energy reaches the source and the source is feeding its designed-for load. If no reflected energy reaches the source, the source impedance doesn't matter, except for efficiency, which doesn't affect the rest of the system. A one ohm source providing 100v to a 50 ohm load and a one megohm source providing 100v to a 50 ohm load will result in identical external conditions when driving a 50 ohm load. The picture is not as clear when reflected current and voltage are allowed to flow into the source. We usually don't know what the source impedance is and that certainly handicaps any analysis. Modern designers simply resort to protection circuitry and don't worry about the energy analysis. We do know that reflections reaching the source are not benign. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|