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Objection, your Honor! Answer is unresponsive to the question.
Sustained. 8-) Gee Cecil, how does one learn of such a "hidden mathematical concept", when it does not seem to be embodied in the formalism? Let's try again. Suppose the standing wave is examined to perfection. Everything that can be determined is measured without error. Now we take the superposition in reverse; specifically we divide the standing wave into forward and reverse traveling components. It would seem that we have a complete and accurate definition for the two traveling wave components. The interrelations, as you call them, between the variables and parameters are fully defined by the basic math and the carefully measured standing wave. What else is needed to describe the traveling waves? Additional variables? Additional coefficients or parameters? Additional hidden mathematical concepts? There seems to be a lack of understanding and appreciation for what the concepts of "linear" and "superposition" really mean. These are not just mathematical concepts. When they apply it means that the system under study is fully and completely described by ** either ** the individual functional subcomponents ** or ** the full superimposed functional component. It is not necessary to use both formats, and there is no added information by doing so. Take a look at any of your favorite antenna references with an eye toward the treatment of standing wave antennas. I believe you will find only passing discussion of traveling waves. There will be some mention of the equivalence between the two types of waves, but little else. It is unlikely that you will find anything that says you will get more information if you take the time and trouble to analyze traveling waves. 73, Gene W4SZ Cecil Moore wrote: Gene Fuller wrote: As you have stated, including references from Hecht, it is customary to mathematically show traveling waves in the form: cos (kz +/- wt) Through straightforward addition and simple trigonometry is is seen that the standing wave corresponding to the sum of equal magnitude forward and reverse traveling waves has the form: cos (kz) * cos (wt) I see I made a typo and typed a '+' sign in my previous equation. Of course, it should have been a '*' sign for multiply. Are there some hidden variables that have not been considered? Not a hidden variable, but there seems to be a hidden mathematical concept, at least hidden from some individuals. In case some might not know, 'z' is the position up and down the wire, omega (w) is our old friend 2*pi*f, and 't' is, of course, time. In the traveling wave equation, cos(kz +/- wt), the position on the wire and omega*time are added or subtracted *before* the cosine function is taken. That means that the position on the wire and the phase velocity are inter-related. One cannot have one without the other. And that is indeed a characteristic of a traveling wave. Physical position, frequency, and time all go into making a traveling wave. It is modeled as a rotating phasor. However, in the equation, cos(kz) * cos(wt), the physical position, 'z' is disconnected from the phase velocity, 'wt'. The standing wave is no longer moving in the 'z' dimension. If you pick a 'z' and hold it constant, i.e. choose a single point on the wire, the standing wave becomes simply some constant times cos(wt). Thus at any fixed point on the line, the standing wave is not moving - it is just oscillating at the 'wt' rate and a current probe will certainly pick up the H-field signal. The phase of the standing wave current is everywhere, up and down the 1/2WL thin-wire, equal to zero. The sum of the forward phasor and reflected phasor doesn't rotate. Its phase doesn't change with position. Only its magnitude changes with position and if the forward wave magnitude equals the reflected wave magnitude, it is not flowing in the real sense that current flows. It is a standing wave and it is just standing there. The main thing to realize is that the standing wave equation divorces the position of the standing wave from its phase velocity such that the phase velocity is not active in the 'z' dimension, i.e. up and down the wire. The standing wave current "pseudo phasor" is not rotating. The standing wave is not going anywhere. It is not flowing along a wire or through a coil. Measuring its phase is meaningless because the phase is already known to be constant and unchanging from tip to tip in a 1/2WL dipole or across a loading coil in a mobile antenna. Thinking that standing wave current flows from the middle of a dipole to the ends is just a misconception. The equation for a standing wave indicates that it doesn't flow. What is flowing are the forward and reflected waves. |
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