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I'm going with Drs. Corum on this one. Solve equation 28 for tau, get
beta from equation 4. The phase velocity along the axis of the coil is omega/beta. The velocity factor in question is that phase velocity over the speed of light in a vacuum. The coil modes are surface waves in a weird coordinate system. Note that the paper is very explicit in saying they're not TEM. Throw equation 28 into Mathematica or Matlab or something and solve for tau. The cases given after equation 28 with all the limitations appear(ed?) to be a point of some contention, but equation 28 seems *only* to have the limitation of circumferential symmetry of the surface waves on the coil. At the junctions between the wire and the coil, there is a transfer of energy between the surface wave modes on the coil and the usual antenna mode (I guess it's TEM?) The coil is like G-line in that it guides surface waves, but the coil modes are modes specific to the helical geometry; the G-line surface waves are specific to the straight-wire geometry. There is a mode on the helix where the waves go round and round the turns, but the example given is a traveling wave tube for microwave amplification, and it seems to me that there are a few turns over a few inches for *microwave* frequencies. I am not one to argue with a solution to Maxwell's equations. -Dan |