xuexucheng
Full Member level 2
- Joined
- May 6, 2010
- Messages
- 145
- Helped
- 4
- Reputation
- 8
- Reaction score
- 4
- Trophy points
- 1,298
- Activity points
- 2,343
in fact, the wave does continue to propagate out of the open end. Maybe 1 to 5% of the power continues to propagate, whle the remaining power reflects back from the "open".
In fact to get an open circuit to really look solely like an open circuit you need to carefully design the outer conductor to be a length of cuttoff circular waveguide that extends beyond the center conductor end.
yes, I know the result, but why? that is the thing I wanna know. I 'd like the physical explanations not the maths.
impedance mismatch!
it takes energy to propel the em wave from a conductor into space.
from a black box perspective, space looks like a very small impedance compared to the 50 or 75 ohm impedance of the coax.
So, only a small amount is delivered to the load and the rest reflects back in the coax.
Antennas are optimized by designs of the correct length.
It's not that they won't work at other lengths, they would simply be less efficient.
---------- Post added at 19:50 ---------- Previous post was at 19:42 ----------
Inside the conductor, the motion of free electrons help propagate the EM wave. At the end of the conductor, free electrons become unavailable and the EM wave must now propagate via photons emitted from the conductor. The photons require energy. The photons leave with the energy. Inside the conductor, the photons are continuously restoring the energy back to free electrons.
Impedance mismatch between cable and antenna results in reflections, as biff44 wrote. Think about it as a transmission line with no losses and ended with a very small antenna (dipole).
For a open coaxial cable as a single point in space, there is no power in space in a specific point, as voltage is a relative value and only exists between two points.
Peak difference in level for a sine wave is between two points of this wave, with distance lambda/2.
Current occur if you connect these two points of different voltage, with a conductor.
A conductor much shorter then lambda/2 can only measure between two points close to each other, seen on sine wave curve.
Both current and voltage is needed to be able to send or receive power.
It is a similar situation for most waves such as sound or water waves.
These physical limitations are bidirectional, a hay-straw is ineffective to create big water waves with as well as catch them.
One way to think about the open end is that it is a shortened antenna structure--one that is way too short to be an efficient radiator. Lets say as an antenna its radiation resistance is 1000 ohms. Clearly, a wave traveling down a 50 ohm transmission line hitting a 1000 ohm load is going to have most of the power reflected.
It is possible with right frequency and power-level. Even a filament can be seen as an antenna.photons can be emit by antenna?
That was what I wrote, no current until a conductor connects two different points in space.In free space, there is no current, I think.
I know the impedance of free space is 377 ohm.
photons can be emit by antenna?
That is because you do not understand transmission line theory. Get a good book like foundations for microwave engineering by Collin and study it. Only then will you understand the above.
thank you for your answer.The reason is that the propagation modes are different in the cable and in free space, because boundary conditions are completely different.
In both cases the mode is TEM because both E and H are perpendicular to the direction of propagation. But, for example, in the cable E is radial; in free space it is totally different.
More than an impedance mismatch, i would say that there is a "mode mismatch".Z
if I change the coaxial cable to 2 paralell plates, I think the E and H direction will be same. How to explain this ?
The mode supported by the infinely-wide waveguide is a TEM planar wave confined in space. When this waveguide stops, from this point you have (in far field) a cylindrical wave (not omnidirectional). In directions different to those contained in the plane parallel to the plates, the [/b]E field[/b] has not the same orientation.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?