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Cecil Moore wrote:
John Popelish wrote: Since, in both standing waves and traveling waves, current at a point, changes magnitude and sign in exactly the same way (at a point, they are indistinguishable), they can both be described with phasor notation. Limiting oneself to a point measurement is handicapping onself. When the equation for standing wave current is compared to the equation for traveling wave current, the real differences are obvious. I was just making sure we were using the same definitions for things like current and phasors. You are jumping ahead. :-) For standing waves, the phasor of a neighboring point has the same phase shift, ... Exactly! Therefore, it cannot be used to measure the phase shift through a coil or even through a wire. I agree, unless you use phase measurement to hunt for the location of the current nodes that have moved as a result of adding the coil. Finding a phase reversal at opposite ends of the coil, for instance, implies that an odd number of nodes reside in the coil. But at any point along both standing waves and traveling waves, there certainly is a phasor that represents the current at that point. For the standing wave current it is a phasor that doesn't rotate all up and down the wire. A phasor rotates at the reference frequency, and with a phase angle that represents the angular difference between the value in question and the reference cycle. Pick a point on the conductor, and if it carries either a standing or traveling wave (or any combination of traveling waves at the reference frequency), the current at that point is describable as a phasor (having a specific magnitude, and a specific phase with respect to the reference cycle). You have to admit, that's a weird phasor. It's more akin to DC than anything else. This is your mental block. A phasor describes the activity at a point, not whether that activity is a result of an energy wave moving past in one direction, the other, or some combination of those. You need to get past this misconception that standing waves are not current and are not describable by phasors. Standing waves current is the superposition of two essentially equal currents traveling in opposite directions. No. Currents do not travel. Current is the movement of charge past a point. Cyclic current is a sloshing back and forth of charge at some frequency. If you want to picture that process with respect to time, you can refer to it as a cycle or wave, but it is a wave on a scope trace or time graph, not a physical wave of something moving along a wire. The physical wave is charge slushing back and forth along the wire. Both traveling energy waves and combinations of them (standing waves, for example) involve energy traveling in various directions, but the current does not travel. It occurs at a point, as charge moves back and forth past that point. When you can separate the concept of current from the concept of energy waves, you might see this snap into focus. I am not trying to be the guru, here. My earlier posts confused these same concepts, when I mentioned current waves traveling in various directions. I was mistaken, and have seen my error, and am trying to get you to see it, also. I should have been speaking of charge waves that produce current. Correct thinking requires correct speaking. You cannot be sloppy with words and have (let alone express) clear thoughts. This thread has done a lot to help me clear up both my words and thoughts, and I thank you for that. I am not absolutely sure that I have eliminated all mistakes from this way of talking about the process under discussion, so I may have to make some more corrections. That is the reason I am watching this thread. If it was equal DC currents traveling in opposite directions, what would the net current be? Their algebraic sum, same as for non equal currents. Same for any combination of currents that result from charge being shoved back and forth by passing energy waves. Instantaneously the current is the algebraic sum of all components passing through that point. If the components are AC at the same frequency, the sum will be some resultant instantaneous current that varies with that same frequency. I think I agree with just about every conclusion you are making about treating coils as slow wave transmission lines. The nits I am picking is in the language you are using to describe these effects to justify those conclusions. I think terminology is at the root of most of the disagreements in this thread. |
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