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John Popelish wrote:
The question, I think is whether large, air core coils act like a single inductance (with some stray capacitance) that has essentially the same current throughout, or is a series of inductances with distributed stray capacitance) that is capable of having different current at different points, a la a transmission line. And the answer must be that it depends on the conditions. At some frequencies, it is indistinguishable from a lumped inductance, but at other frequencies, it is clearly distinguishable. You have to be aware of the boundary case. Dr. Corum says the boundary is 15 degrees, or 0.04 wavelength. Another place in his class notes he says that if 1/6 of a wavelength of wire is used to make the coil, the lumped-circuit model will NOT work. My 75m bugcatcher coil is more than 1/6 of a wavelength of wire. But a continuous coil is not a series of discrete lumped inductances with discrete capacitances between them to ground, but a continuous thing. In that regard, it bears a lot of similarity to a transmission line. But it has flux coupling between nearby turns, so it also has inductive properties different from a simple transmission line. Which effect dominates depends on frequency. Dr. Corum has a test equation to see if his velocity factor equation applies. The test is: 5*N*D^2/lamda(0) = 1 where N is number of turns, D is the diameter of the coil, and lamda(0) is the self-resonant frequency. If this equation is satisfied, then equation (32) applies for velocity factor. For my 75m bugcatcher coil, the test number is 0.4 = 1 and the velocity factor equation yields 0.0175. That's certainly a slow wave device. But its propagation speed will be slower than it would be if the wire were straight. don't know if that qualifies it for a "slow wave" line or not. A velocity factor of 0.0175 for a 75m bugcatcher seems to qualify. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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