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Tom Donaly, KA6RUH wrote:
"There is nothing in the natural world that can double itself and go in the opposite direction at the same time." Watch water waves slam into a bulkhead and you can see the reflected waves interfere with the incident waves as they travel in the opposite directions. Electrical waves, incident and reflected, pass through each other too. In the antenna or transmission line, the charge is impelled by the energy supplied by the generator to move back and forth on the surface of the wire at the radio frequency rate. The incident wave and the reflected wave on a transmission line travel in opposite directions. At certain points along the line the voltages in the waves will be in phase and will add, while in other points they will be out of phase and subtract. The points along the line where the two voltages are in phase are points of maximum voltage and minimum current and are spaced one half wavelength apart. The points along the line where the two voltages are 180-degrees out of phase are points of minimum voltage and maximum current and are also one half wavelength apart. The distance between alternate points is one-quarter wavelength. The reflection of a radio wave is a natural occurrence. When the voltage produced by the incident wave hits the open-circuit of a wire it doubles itself and starts a wave propagating in the opposite direction while the incident waves are yet arriving at the open-circuit. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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