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#1
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Unable to resist at least trying to provide the basis for some
understanding, Steve proceeds. Jim, you know who you are... Thank you. Here's a go at a start. Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm's law. The resistor "resists", determines or limits the current. Oh yea, resistors have this characteristic we call resistance measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Ohms law: I = V/R Say... 12 Volts on a 50 ohm resistor results in 0.24 amps flowing. For the same reason (big bang) this removes power from the circuit, or "dissipates" it. Poof! Gone from the circuit. Resistors happen to turn this power into heat. The value being discoverable by the power formula: P=IxV and the variations P=E^2/R and P=I^2xR It also turns out that ANYTHING else that removes power from a circuit looks just like a resistor to the circuit (obeys Ohm's law), and *ONLY* things that LOOK just like a resistor (behave or conduct current according to Ohm's law) will so remove power from said ckt. IF you didn't catch this, there are things that are not really resistors, yet act just like them as far as a circuit is concerned. Unfortunately, life is fraught with dangers and we have capacitors (C) and inductors (L)(or things which behave just like them or combinations of them). When we get into this realm, the "R" from above, just doesn't do it. Things get all messed up. These things also "resist" current flow. (or determine or limit it). We call this form of resisting "Reactance", use the letter "X" to represent it and it also is measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Oh yea, we also use the little subscript letter to indicate if it is an inductive (l) or capacitive (c)reactance. Xc ("X" sub c) = 1/(2 x pi x f x C ) Xl ("X" sub L) = 2 x pi x f x L When we want to talk about the effect or either an "L" or a "C" we simply use the term "Reactance" It's like a good substitute for "he/she" (the "wrong one being "they"). Because of (big bang again) the way the current in these (C & L) corruptions, of our purely resistive world, work out to be 90 degrees out of phase with the voltage (we are talking about AC now), we had to find a way to account for them. I won't trouble you with just why now, but we use what is called the "Series Representation". It looks like two numbers with a + or - sign between them and all together we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance". And use the letter "Z" to represent it. It has some Resistance and some Reactance in there and it will have numbers on ohms: In general: It looks like this: Z = R + jX The "R" is the same kind of resistor as above, the "X" is one of the reactances. The "j" helps the mathematicians do the math - like ohms law - but with the reactance accounted for. In "math speak" the "R" is the "real" part and the "X" is the "Imaginary" part of the impedance. Impedance also resists current flow, but with the reactance in there, you can't use Ohm's law like you used to. SO... When I say "Impedance" or use "Z" I am talking about whatever happens to be there. Since I don't know if it is only resistive, called also "Purely resistive", or has some reactance in it, called "reactive", (or if I am just too lazy to figure it out at the time), I use this word or symbol to cover any situation. Finally, since only the "resistive part" of a circuit dissipates any power, we like to remove (somehow) all the reactance (or imaginary part) and somehow make the real part (the resistive part) what we like best (for a given situation). Doing this is the infinitely complex subject called "impedance matching". When we make this happen on an antenna, the remaining "resistive part" sucks power from the circuit (the transmitter circuit) Poof! BUT converts it into radiated radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave. Fortunately for us in this modern day and age, because if it didn't all the receivers that we have would be useless and we would wonder why we built them. Help any??? 73 Steve-- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#2
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Hi-Ho Stevo, Outstanding reply to Jimbo and a bunch of us out here that
do not really "know" all that we "undetstand" about electronics! There, I said it for the bunch! No flames from the huddling masses now! Butch KF5DE Steve Nosko wrote: Unable to resist at least trying to provide the basis for some understanding, Steve proceeds. Jim, you know who you are... snippity-snip |
#3
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![]() Steve's info will get you a beginners understanding of circuit theory which is based on a low-frequency, quasi-static simplification of electromagnetic theory. Unfortunately, anything that has any appreciable length, such as a transmission line or an antenna, or a long coil of wire as Yuri and Cecil are arguing about, can't be adequately explained by simple circuit theory; you have to study wave mechanics to get any real idea of what is happening in these situations. That isn't the end of it, though, since in order to understand what is happening when an object radiates, you have to understand Maxwell's equations. In order to understand Maxwell's equations, you'd better know vector calculus. That isn't the end, either, but it's as close as any *normal* human wants to go. Whenever someone who was taught circuit theory tries to apply its vocabulary and concepts to explain all electromagnetic phenomena, that someone is going to run into trouble and come up with a multitude of idiocies for which which he'll find no end of people ready to criticize him. This is the problem: Cecil and Yuri want to explain the current taper through a long solenoidal coil using the vocabulary and concepts of circuit theory rather than the difficult but more precise language of electromagnetic theory. So far they've failed miserably, not least because they don't even seem to have a coherent idea of what they mean by "current flow." I wish them luck, but I hope no one takes any of their ideas seriously. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH Steve wrote, Unable to resist at least trying to provide the basis for some understanding, Steve proceeds. Jim, you know who you are... Thank you. Here's a go at a start. Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm's law. The resistor "resists", determines or limits the current. Oh yea, resistors have this characteristic we call resistance measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Ohms law: I = V/R Say... 12 Volts on a 50 ohm resistor results in 0.24 amps flowing. For the same reason (big bang) this removes power from the circuit, or "dissipates" it. Poof! Gone from the circuit. Resistors happen to turn this power into heat. The value being discoverable by the power formula: P=IxV and the variations P=E^2/R and P=I^2xR It also turns out that ANYTHING else that removes power from a circuit looks just like a resistor to the circuit (obeys Ohm's law), and *ONLY* things that LOOK just like a resistor (behave or conduct current according to Ohm's law) will so remove power from said ckt. IF you didn't catch this, there are things that are not really resistors, yet act just like them as far as a circuit is concerned. Unfortunately, life is fraught with dangers and we have capacitors (C) and inductors (L)(or things which behave just like them or combinations of them). When we get into this realm, the "R" from above, just doesn't do it. Things get all messed up. These things also "resist" current flow. (or determine or limit it). We call this form of resisting "Reactance", use the letter "X" to represent it and it also is measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Oh yea, we also use the little subscript letter to indicate if it is an inductive (l) or capacitive (c)reactance. Xc ("X" sub c) = 1/(2 x pi x f x C ) Xl ("X" sub L) = 2 x pi x f x L When we want to talk about the effect or either an "L" or a "C" we simply use the term "Reactance" It's like a good substitute for "he/she" (the "wrong one being "they"). Because of (big bang again) the way the current in these (C & L) corruptions, of our purely resistive world, work out to be 90 degrees out of phase with the voltage (we are talking about AC now), we had to find a way to account for them. I won't trouble you with just why now, but we use what is called the "Series Representation". It looks like two numbers with a + or - sign between them and all together we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance". And use the letter "Z" to represent it. It has some Resistance and some Reactance in there and it will have numbers on ohms: In general: It looks like this: Z = R + jX The "R" is the same kind of resistor as above, the "X" is one of the reactances. The "j" helps the mathematicians do the math - like ohms law - but with the reactance accounted for. In "math speak" the "R" is the "real" part and the "X" is the "Imaginary" part of the impedance. Impedance also resists current flow, but with the reactance in there, you can't use Ohm's law like you used to. SO... When I say "Impedance" or use "Z" I am talking about whatever happens to be there. Since I don't know if it is only resistive, called also "Purely resistive", or has some reactance in it, called "reactive", (or if I am just too lazy to figure it out at the time), I use this word or symbol to cover any situation. Finally, since only the "resistive part" of a circuit dissipates any power, we like to remove (somehow) all the reactance (or imaginary part) and somehow make the real part (the resistive part) what we like best (for a given situation). Doing this is the infinitely complex subject called "impedance matching". When we make this happen on an antenna, the remaining "resistive part" sucks power from the circuit (the transmitter circuit) Poof! BUT converts it into radiated radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave. Fortunately for us in this modern day and age, because if it didn't all the receivers that we have would be useless and we would wonder why we built them. Help any??? 73 Steve-- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#4
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Time out!! You people are taking all this far to seriously. Just throw
an aerial out the window, feed it to your rig via a tuner, and enjoy Amateur radio. Butch Magee KF5DE Tdonaly wrote: Steve's info will get you a beginners understanding of circuit theory which is based on a low-frequency, quasi-static simplification of electromagnetic theory. Unfortunately, anything that has any appreciable length, such as a transmission line or an antenna, or a long coil of wire as Yuri and Cecil are arguing about, can't be adequately explained by simple circuit theory; you have to study wave mechanics to get any real idea of what is happening in these situations. That isn't the end of it, though, since in order to understand what is happening when an object radiates, you have to understand Maxwell's equations. In order to understand Maxwell's equations, you'd better know vector calculus. That isn't the end, either, but it's as close as any *normal* human wants to go. Whenever someone who was taught circuit theory tries to apply its vocabulary and concepts to explain all electromagnetic phenomena, that someone is going to run into trouble and come up with a multitude of idiocies for which which he'll find no end of people ready to criticize him. This is the problem: Cecil and Yuri want to explain the current taper through a long solenoidal coil using the vocabulary and concepts of circuit theory rather than the difficult but more precise language of electromagnetic theory. So far they've failed miserably, not least because they don't even seem to have a coherent idea of what they mean by "current flow." I wish them luck, but I hope no one takes any of their ideas seriously. 73, Tom Donaly, KA6RUH Steve wrote, Unable to resist at least trying to provide the basis for some understanding, Steve proceeds. Jim, you know who you are... Thank you. Here's a go at a start. Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm's law. The resistor "resists", determines or limits the current. Oh yea, resistors have this characteristic we call resistance measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Ohms law: I = V/R Say... 12 Volts on a 50 ohm resistor results in 0.24 amps flowing. For the same reason (big bang) this removes power from the circuit, or "dissipates" it. Poof! Gone from the circuit. Resistors happen to turn this power into heat. The value being discoverable by the power formula: P=IxV and the variations P=E^2/R and P=I^2xR It also turns out that ANYTHING else that removes power from a circuit looks just like a resistor to the circuit (obeys Ohm's law), and *ONLY* things that LOOK just like a resistor (behave or conduct current according to Ohm's law) will so remove power from said ckt. IF you didn't catch this, there are things that are not really resistors, yet act just like them as far as a circuit is concerned. Unfortunately, life is fraught with dangers and we have capacitors (C) and inductors (L)(or things which behave just like them or combinations of them). When we get into this realm, the "R" from above, just doesn't do it. Things get all messed up. These things also "resist" current flow. (or determine or limit it). We call this form of resisting "Reactance", use the letter "X" to represent it and it also is measured in "Ohms", just for using in the formulas. Oh yea, we also use the little subscript letter to indicate if it is an inductive (l) or capacitive (c)reactance. Xc ("X" sub c) = 1/(2 x pi x f x C ) Xl ("X" sub L) = 2 x pi x f x L When we want to talk about the effect or either an "L" or a "C" we simply use the term "Reactance" It's like a good substitute for "he/she" (the "wrong one being "they"). Because of (big bang again) the way the current in these (C & L) corruptions, of our purely resistive world, work out to be 90 degrees out of phase with the voltage (we are talking about AC now), we had to find a way to account for them. I won't trouble you with just why now, but we use what is called the "Series Representation". It looks like two numbers with a + or - sign between them and all together we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance". And use the letter "Z" to represent it. It has some Resistance and some Reactance in there and it will have numbers on ohms: In general: It looks like this: Z = R + jX The "R" is the same kind of resistor as above, the "X" is one of the reactances. The "j" helps the mathematicians do the math - like ohms law - but with the reactance accounted for. In "math speak" the "R" is the "real" part and the "X" is the "Imaginary" part of the impedance. Impedance also resists current flow, but with the reactance in there, you can't use Ohm's law like you used to. SO... When I say "Impedance" or use "Z" I am talking about whatever happens to be there. Since I don't know if it is only resistive, called also "Purely resistive", or has some reactance in it, called "reactive", (or if I am just too lazy to figure it out at the time), I use this word or symbol to cover any situation. Finally, since only the "resistive part" of a circuit dissipates any power, we like to remove (somehow) all the reactance (or imaginary part) and somehow make the real part (the resistive part) what we like best (for a given situation). Doing this is the infinitely complex subject called "impedance matching". When we make this happen on an antenna, the remaining "resistive part" sucks power from the circuit (the transmitter circuit) Poof! BUT converts it into radiated radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave. Fortunately for us in this modern day and age, because if it didn't all the receivers that we have would be useless and we would wonder why we built them. Help any??? 73 Steve-- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#5
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![]() "Butch" wrote in message ... Time out!! You people are taking all this far to seriously. Just throw an aerial out the window, feed it to your rig via a tuner, and enjoy Amateur radio. Butch Magee KF5DE It just not that simple, Butch. I'm sure you have heard that Ham radio is a hobby that has many facets; construction, public service, contesting, field trips, QRP DX, etc. Some of our members get their kicks merging theory with rag chewing. I don't think there's any structure to this sub-category, other than to require at least one mention of Maxwell in every discussion. Ed WB6WSN |
#6
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Steve Nosko wrote:
"Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm`s law." Big bang? Ohm wasn`t around then. He lived 1787 to 1854. Ohm discovered that current in an electrical resistance is proportional to voltage. Resistance is the type of impedance (opposition to electrical current) in which current is locked in step to the applied voltage. The item called a resistor is the type of resistance that converts electrical energy to heat energy. Not all resistances are resistors. Some resistances don`t convert electrical energy directly into heat. In these non-dissipative resistances, current drop is in-phase with the applied volts, or voltage dropped across the resistance is in-phase with current through the resistance, but it does not cause energy loss. An example of lossless resistance is the Zo or surge impedance of a transmission line. Zo is caused by the distributed inductance and capacitance of the line, but current in the line is in-phase with the voltage across the line. Zo is the voltage to current ratio of the waves traveling in either direction on the transmission line. Zo = volts/amps, yet converts no energy to heat in the lossless line. Another example of lossless resistance is "radiation resistance". This is the desired antenna load, so it is hardly a loss. Loss in the wire, earth, and insulators of the antenna are resistive loads which produce heat but don`t help the signal. An ohm is the unit of resistance. It is defined at 0-degrees C, of a uniform column of mercury 106.300 cm long and weighing 14.451 grams. One ohm is the resistance which drops one voltt when a current of one amp is passed through it. Reactances are also defined by their volts to amps ratios (ohms). The big difference is that reactance does no work and produces no heat. Opposition to electrical current comes from delay required to store ard retrieve energy to and from fields in and around the reactances. Current lags the applied voltage in an inductance. At time = 0, no current flows into an inductance, but rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. Current leads the applied voltage into a capacitance. At time = 0, full current flows into a capacitance but voltage across the capacitance is zero and rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. In an a-c circuit, the current through an inductance lags the voltage by 90-degrees. In a a-c circuit, the current through a capacitance leads the voltage by 90-degrees. Phase shifts are produced by energy storage in reactance. There is no phase shift in a resistance. No electrical energy is stored in a resistor, but its matter does have a thermal capacity. Once its atoms are agitated by heat their inertia is evident in the resistance`s temperature. It takes time to cool. Steve wrote: "Things get all messed up." As old Carson Robinson sang: "Life gets tedious, Don`t it?" Steve gave the formulas for capacitive and inductive reactances. They have always seemed convenient to me. Steve says: "---we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance"." No. Impedance is the general name for opposition to electricity. Resistance is the specialized name for the case in which the impedance alone causes no delay and stores no electrical energy. All electrical impedance is defined by its voltage to current ratio, and is the total opposition (resistance and reactance) a circuit offers to the flow of electricity. For d-c, reactance doesn`t count. For a-c, total opposition consists of the vector (phasor) sum of resistance and reactance in a circuit. Impedance is measured in ohms and its reciprocal is called admittance. The symbol for impedance is Z. The symbol for admittance is Y. Steve also writes: "Poof! BUT converts it into radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave." Yes. A radio wave is r-f energy which has escaped the confines of wires and doesn`t come back. Whenever wires in open space carry high-frequency current, some energy gets away as a radiated field, having a strength that varies inversely with the distance. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#7
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Richard:
Hmmm.... Impedance... let's give it its' proper due! It was the self taught "electrician", and ultimately Fellow of the Royal Society, Oliver Heaviside, FRS [1850 - 1925] who was born in the London slums to a very poor family and who had never attended any school beyond the age of 16 who was the person who coined, defined and first used the terms "impedance", "admittance", and "reactance". Oliver Heaviside also gave us Maxwell's Equations in the form we now know them. Maxwell wrote his equations in the form of 22 separate equations using the arcane method of "quaternions". Heaviside simplified those 22 equations given by Maxwell down to the four simple equations with two auxilliary constituent relations that we now know and love. James Clerk Maxwell was a Cambridge educated mathematician from an affluent and educated family. Oliver Heaviside was a poor kid from the London slums who had to go out to work at age 16 and never saw the inside of a college or university! Heaviside never appeared to receive the citation at the ceremony to which he was invited when he was inducted as a Fellow of the Royal Society after he was duly elected to that lofty title by the greatest Scientists of the day. "Impedance"... thank you Oliver! -- Peter K1PO Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Steve Nosko wrote: "Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm`s law." Big bang? Ohm wasn`t around then. He lived 1787 to 1854. Ohm discovered that current in an electrical resistance is proportional to voltage. Resistance is the type of impedance (opposition to electrical current) in which current is locked in step to the applied voltage. The item called a resistor is the type of resistance that converts electrical energy to heat energy. Not all resistances are resistors. Some resistances don`t convert electrical energy directly into heat. In these non-dissipative resistances, current drop is in-phase with the applied volts, or voltage dropped across the resistance is in-phase with current through the resistance, but it does not cause energy loss. An example of lossless resistance is the Zo or surge impedance of a transmission line. Zo is caused by the distributed inductance and capacitance of the line, but current in the line is in-phase with the voltage across the line. Zo is the voltage to current ratio of the waves traveling in either direction on the transmission line. Zo = volts/amps, yet converts no energy to heat in the lossless line. Another example of lossless resistance is "radiation resistance". This is the desired antenna load, so it is hardly a loss. Loss in the wire, earth, and insulators of the antenna are resistive loads which produce heat but don`t help the signal. An ohm is the unit of resistance. It is defined at 0-degrees C, of a uniform column of mercury 106.300 cm long and weighing 14.451 grams. One ohm is the resistance which drops one voltt when a current of one amp is passed through it. Reactances are also defined by their volts to amps ratios (ohms). The big difference is that reactance does no work and produces no heat. Opposition to electrical current comes from delay required to store ard retrieve energy to and from fields in and around the reactances. Current lags the applied voltage in an inductance. At time = 0, no current flows into an inductance, but rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. Current leads the applied voltage into a capacitance. At time = 0, full current flows into a capacitance but voltage across the capacitance is zero and rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. In an a-c circuit, the current through an inductance lags the voltage by 90-degrees. In a a-c circuit, the current through a capacitance leads the voltage by 90-degrees. Phase shifts are produced by energy storage in reactance. There is no phase shift in a resistance. No electrical energy is stored in a resistor, but its matter does have a thermal capacity. Once its atoms are agitated by heat their inertia is evident in the resistance`s temperature. It takes time to cool. Steve wrote: "Things get all messed up." As old Carson Robinson sang: "Life gets tedious, Don`t it?" Steve gave the formulas for capacitive and inductive reactances. They have always seemed convenient to me. Steve says: "---we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance"." No. Impedance is the general name for opposition to electricity. Resistance is the specialized name for the case in which the impedance alone causes no delay and stores no electrical energy. All electrical impedance is defined by its voltage to current ratio, and is the total opposition (resistance and reactance) a circuit offers to the flow of electricity. For d-c, reactance doesn`t count. For a-c, total opposition consists of the vector (phasor) sum of resistance and reactance in a circuit. Impedance is measured in ohms and its reciprocal is called admittance. The symbol for impedance is Z. The symbol for admittance is Y. Steve also writes: "Poof! BUT converts it into radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave." Yes. A radio wave is r-f energy which has escaped the confines of wires and doesn`t come back. Whenever wires in open space carry high-frequency current, some energy gets away as a radiated field, having a strength that varies inversely with the distance. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#8
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![]() I have been convinced that "impedance" is the ratio of force to response in any media. That has worked well for me. Maybe there are readers who can set me straight if I've been wrong. Jerry "Peter O. Brackett" wrote in message news ![]() Richard: Hmmm.... Impedance... let's give it its' proper due! It was the self taught "electrician", and ultimately Fellow of the Royal Society, Oliver Heaviside, FRS [1850 - 1925] who was born in the London slums to a very poor family and who had never attended any school beyond the age of 16 who was the person who coined, defined and first used the terms "impedance", "admittance", and "reactance". Oliver Heaviside also gave us Maxwell's Equations in the form we now know them. Maxwell wrote his equations in the form of 22 separate equations using the arcane method of "quaternions". Heaviside simplified those 22 equations given by Maxwell down to the four simple equations with two auxilliary constituent relations that we now know and love. James Clerk Maxwell was a Cambridge educated mathematician from an affluent and educated family. Oliver Heaviside was a poor kid from the London slums who had to go out to work at age 16 and never saw the inside of a college or university! Heaviside never appeared to receive the citation at the ceremony to which he was invited when he was inducted as a Fellow of the Royal Society after he was duly elected to that lofty title by the greatest Scientists of the day. "Impedance"... thank you Oliver! -- Peter K1PO Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Steve Nosko wrote: "Apparently, because of the way the big bang occurred, when we put a voltage across a resistor current flows in a manner that we discovered follows the equation called Ohm`s law." Big bang? Ohm wasn`t around then. He lived 1787 to 1854. Ohm discovered that current in an electrical resistance is proportional to voltage. Resistance is the type of impedance (opposition to electrical current) in which current is locked in step to the applied voltage. The item called a resistor is the type of resistance that converts electrical energy to heat energy. Not all resistances are resistors. Some resistances don`t convert electrical energy directly into heat. In these non-dissipative resistances, current drop is in-phase with the applied volts, or voltage dropped across the resistance is in-phase with current through the resistance, but it does not cause energy loss. An example of lossless resistance is the Zo or surge impedance of a transmission line. Zo is caused by the distributed inductance and capacitance of the line, but current in the line is in-phase with the voltage across the line. Zo is the voltage to current ratio of the waves traveling in either direction on the transmission line. Zo = volts/amps, yet converts no energy to heat in the lossless line. Another example of lossless resistance is "radiation resistance". This is the desired antenna load, so it is hardly a loss. Loss in the wire, earth, and insulators of the antenna are resistive loads which produce heat but don`t help the signal. An ohm is the unit of resistance. It is defined at 0-degrees C, of a uniform column of mercury 106.300 cm long and weighing 14.451 grams. One ohm is the resistance which drops one voltt when a current of one amp is passed through it. Reactances are also defined by their volts to amps ratios (ohms). The big difference is that reactance does no work and produces no heat. Opposition to electrical current comes from delay required to store ard retrieve energy to and from fields in and around the reactances. Current lags the applied voltage in an inductance. At time = 0, no current flows into an inductance, but rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. Current leads the applied voltage into a capacitance. At time = 0, full current flows into a capacitance but voltage across the capacitance is zero and rises exponentially from the instant of initial energization. In an a-c circuit, the current through an inductance lags the voltage by 90-degrees. In a a-c circuit, the current through a capacitance leads the voltage by 90-degrees. Phase shifts are produced by energy storage in reactance. There is no phase shift in a resistance. No electrical energy is stored in a resistor, but its matter does have a thermal capacity. Once its atoms are agitated by heat their inertia is evident in the resistance`s temperature. It takes time to cool. Steve wrote: "Things get all messed up." As old Carson Robinson sang: "Life gets tedious, Don`t it?" Steve gave the formulas for capacitive and inductive reactances. They have always seemed convenient to me. Steve says: "---we call this new kind of (corrupted) resistance "Impedance"." No. Impedance is the general name for opposition to electricity. Resistance is the specialized name for the case in which the impedance alone causes no delay and stores no electrical energy. All electrical impedance is defined by its voltage to current ratio, and is the total opposition (resistance and reactance) a circuit offers to the flow of electricity. For d-c, reactance doesn`t count. For a-c, total opposition consists of the vector (phasor) sum of resistance and reactance in a circuit. Impedance is measured in ohms and its reciprocal is called admittance. The symbol for impedance is Z. The symbol for admittance is Y. Steve also writes: "Poof! BUT converts it into radio frequency energy (RF) also called an electromagnetic field or wave." Yes. A radio wave is r-f energy which has escaped the confines of wires and doesn`t come back. Whenever wires in open space carry high-frequency current, some energy gets away as a radiated field, having a strength that varies inversely with the distance. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#10
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"Butch" wrote in message
... Hi-Ho Stevo, Outstanding reply to Jimbo and a bunch of us out here that do not really "know" all that we "undetstand" about electronics! There, I said it for the bunch! No flames from the huddling masses now! Butch KF5DE Steve Nosko wrote: Unable to resist at least trying to provide the basis for some understanding, Steve proceeds. Jim, you know who you are... snippity-snip Thanks, Butch. That was the intent. Glad it it helps. Please don't huddle and don't be so snippity ( ; - ) -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
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