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Cecil,
I do not have a copy of Hecht, but I doubt that he has made any serious mistakes. Certainly he should have no mistakes in an area that is as well understand and widely discussed as plane wave interactions with discontinuities in the medium. The classic treatment of this problem, found in virtually every college-level textbook on E&M or optics, is to set up the appropriate wave equations, add the boundary conditions, and crank out the answer. Then there is typically some sort of analysis and discussion that says, "The reflected intensity plus the transmitted intensity is equal to the incident intensity. Energy is conserved." I suspect Hecht provides exactly that sort of description. I know that all of the relevant textbooks I have do so. I believe you are reading too much into something Hecht is saying, perhaps in an effort to somehow reconcile conservation of energy. The beauty of the laws of E&M, as expressed by Maxwell's equations and other fundamental properties, is that conservation of energy is automatic, at least in ordinary circumstances. If one correctly solves for the field equations, the energy conservation will come along for free. Conversely, it is customary to use energy considerations as the primary vehicle for addressing many physical problems in advanced mechanics, quantum mechanics, solid state physics, and other branches of science. The bottom line is that there are a number of tools available to develop correct solutions to physical problems. Steve Best chose one path, and you choose another. You both come up with the same answer in terms of what can be measured. The mathematical constructs underlying the solution may be different, but those constructs are not directly measurable. Don't limit your toolbox. Sometimes a screwdriver is easier to use than a monkey wrench. 73, Gene W4SZ Cecil Moore wrote: Gene Fuller wrote: I thought my intention was obvious, but it seems I failed to communicate. Others on this newsgroup have admonished me for worrying about energy and refused to discuss the subject. I thought you were doing the same. Sorry. But do you actually have any references that contradict "Optics", by Hecht? In Dr. Best's article, he superposes V1 with V2 such that constructive interference energy is needed to complete the superposition. On this newsgroup, I asked Dr. Best where that necessary constructive interference energy comes from and he didn't know. That's when I went searching for references and found them in the field of optics. Constructive interference energy can be supplied by local sources as occurs in W7EL's "Food for Thought #1" with its DC example. Or constructive interference energy can be supplied at a point away from the source(s) by destructive interference, e.g. wave cancellation at the non-reflection surface of a layer of thin-film on glass or at a match point in a transmission line. |
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