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John Popelish wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote: John Popelish wrote: A point of clarification to John's posting: When a standing wave exists on a transmission line, the phase of the voltage or current is fixed (other than periodic phase reversals) with position only if the end of the line is open or short circuited. Otherwise, the phase of voltage and current will change with position. Is that because the result is not a pure standing wave (superposition of two equal and oppositely traveling waves), but a superposition of a pair of traveling oppositely traveling waves of different amplitudes? Yes, but I wouldn't put it quite that way. I prefer to say that this is simply a special case of the more general result you get when you sum forward and reverse waves. Nothing magical or abrupt happens when the two traveling waves are equal in amplitude -- if they're slightly different, you get a little phase shift of the total current with position along the wire, the current minima aren't quite zero, and the spatial shape of the amplitude of the total current -- that is, the shape of the standing wave -- isn't quite sinusoidal. Making the amplitudes more and more different smoothly transitions the nature of the total current until in the special case of the reverse traveling wave being zero you have the distribution of a pure traveling wave. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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