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En/na Roy Lewallen ha escrit:
EA3FYA - Toni wrote: I know that a coax cable does not radiate (if common mode currents properly suppressed) because both conductors are apparently "in the same place" (wouldn't know how to express it in more technical terms). Here's why it doesn't radiate: In a coaxial cable with a solid shield, the differential mode current is entirely inside the shield. Current and fields penetrate only a very small distance from the inner surface of the shield, and no significant amount ever makes it through to the outside. This is assuming that the shield is at least several skin depths thick, which is a good assumption at HF and above. When you say "Current and fields penetrate only a very small distance...", I agree for the current part, but I'm not so sure for the fields part: As I understand it you can not "stop a field" in no way, though you can certainly nullify it with an identical but opposite field. Then the question is whether the two fields (the one from the current flowing in the shield + the one from the current flowing in the inner conductor) nullify at all points in the immediate vicinity of the shield. I certainly believe it but would like to understand why this is so. I guess the mathematical proof would involve assuming the braid is an infinite number of conductors equally spaced around the center conductor, each having it's infinitesimal share of the shield current, and integrating all of their fields at the point of interest (Would probably be able to do so back when I was at university but now it is too strong math for me). Would this be a good approximation of the problem? -- Toni |
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