Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
K7ITM wrote:
Hmmm...this is getting back really close to what I was trying to get at when I posted the capacitance-of-a-wire-conundrum basenote a few weeks ago that went nowhere. But since you've opened it up again, I'll toss out some conundrum-ish things about it. Consider a wire that's perpendicular to a ground plane; obviously this is interesting for a doublet configuration also, because of symmetry. I believe I can, without too much trouble, find the inductance of a cylinder of current--current in the shallow skin depth of the wire, which is different than the inductance at low frequencies--per unit length. I believe it will be relatively unaffected by distance along the wire. I believe I can, with a little more difficulty, find the (DC, as you say) capacitance to the ground plane of a section of wire that's short, in isolation from the rest of the wire (as if the rest of the wire weren't there). But I believe that capacitance will be a much stronger function of distance from that short section to the ground plane than was the case for inductance. That leaves me with a velocity, sqrt((capacitance/unit length)*(inductance/unit length)), that is not particularly constant along the length of wire. I know that things really are like you say: the velocity along that wire will be nearly the speed of light. So that tells me that something is wrong, and three things come immediately to mind: either the inductance is more variable with distance from the ground plane than I think it is, or the capacitance is less variable, or the DC analysis does not hold when we are dealing with things propagating at about the speed of light. In fact, there is a clue in the fact that for the whole wire, with one end spaced a very small distance from the ground plane and the other end far away, in a DC case the charge would be clustered near the ground plane, with very little charge at the tip...but in a resonant antenna, there is often a LOT of charge out near the end that's far away from the ground plane. OK, that ought to be enough to get lots of conflicting responses going! Cheers, Tom What is the transmission mode in a single conductor transmission line? Does a coil support TEM waves, TM, or TE? Is there some type of cutoff frequency? How do you compute the phase velocity? How do you know the phase velocity of an electromagnetic wave on a coil of wire isn't greater than the speed of light in the helical direction? People like Reg and Cecil like to simplify things to the point of absurdity. Things that complicate the picture and disagree with their simplifications are promptly ignored. I hope no one reading these posts is under the false impression he's learning transmission line theory. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH |