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Richard,
I'm pretty sure steady state isn't achieved in that short a time when there are significant reflections on a line that long. Consider this. Initially, forward power from a 100 Joule per second source is, naturally, just 100 Joules per second. After one second, (the first second in particular), there should be 100 Joules on the line. It follows that the initial reflection would be 50 watts. When we assume that everything is re-reflected from the source, then at two seconds the forward power at the front of the line would be 150 watts. At four seconds, 175 watts; six seconds, 187.5; eight seconds, 193.75, and so on. When the number finally reaches 200 Joules per second at the load, the reflected power would have become 100 Joules per second back at the source one second earlier. At that point we can multiply the sum of forward and reflected power by the length of the line in seconds and gleefully announce that 300 Joules are being/have been stored in/on/at the xmission line. 73, ac6xg Richard Harrison wrote: I`ll speculate that after one second, 200 joules are contained in the forward wave on that line. Then, after two seconds, another 100 joules has been reflected back toward the line feedpoint where it opposes growth of power input to the line. Total joules on the line is 300. Forward power minus the reflected power equals 100 watts being supplied by the generator to the load with 200 watts forward power and 100 watts reflrcted power in the line. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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