But how exactly do the voltage and current propagate through transmission lines?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024

Комментарии • 68

  • @AJ.Ferguson
    @AJ.Ferguson Год назад +3

    8:42 is that the right minus sign? Or is it the one to the left of the gamma that represents a phase shift by 180°?

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад +1

      yes! you are right
      thank you

  • @alyasker2194
    @alyasker2194 Год назад +39

    you sir are amazing , a half semester of my professor trying to explain this and you swept every thing in 15 minutes. Brilliant!

    • @DeezNutz-ce5se
      @DeezNutz-ce5se Год назад

      What are you studying where they cover this?

    • @alyasker2194
      @alyasker2194 Год назад +1

      @@DeezNutz-ce5se communication systems engineering

  • @uromastix87
    @uromastix87 Год назад +13

    I've been looking for a good explanation on impedance matching cause I never really got it in my fields course. This video has amazing visualizations and explanations. Thank you so much

  • @alexfwfwfw4830
    @alexfwfwfw4830 Год назад +5

    One of the best videos I have seen about transmission lines. My congratulations!

  • @rishi5670
    @rishi5670 11 месяцев назад

    3D visualization of these theories is so rare and you're doing a great job sir. Thank you for your videos.

  • @aieousavren
    @aieousavren Год назад +3

    Wowwwww! Very excellent video!!!
    Beautiful animations, clear exposition, enlightening concept. Great job and thank you for your hard work! ❤

  • @systemmatrixa2702
    @systemmatrixa2702 4 месяца назад

    This channel is pure gold. Would love to hear more about power electronics or energy engineering from you :) ❤

  • @user-dt1zg5qh7r
    @user-dt1zg5qh7r 11 месяцев назад

    Great 4-D video showing the often ignored time and especially the imaginary part! Someone already pointed out the wrong highlighted negative sign by Gamma. The voltage/current amplitude triangular chart also is slightly wrong. Gamma is the same for both voltage and current (there should only be one circle for showing 1 + Gamma and 1 - Gamma), but the voltage/current amplitudes have different prefactors (by a factor of z_0) which scale the whole term in parentheses. If just showing 1 +/- Gamma, there is one circle and a clear way to see the standing wave ratio.

  • @luphiax4239
    @luphiax4239 3 месяца назад

    from an electronic engineer perspective this is absolute genious

  • @alinezhadi
    @alinezhadi Год назад +3

    Giving some practical examples using capacitors or ... would make this video more understandable for other students with different background who are interested in this topic.

  • @Wander4P
    @Wander4P 10 месяцев назад +2

    I think there's a mistake at @8:45. That minus sign is the same for both current and voltage. I think it's the sign in front of Gamma which rotates the vector 180 degrees.

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, You are right :)

  • @AK56fire
    @AK56fire Год назад +3

    Brilliant explanation and animations are great as always..

  • @rrb6544
    @rrb6544 Год назад +1

    The graphs in these videos are awesome. I love it!

  • @geometry_manim
    @geometry_manim Год назад +1

    These animations are perfect! Thank you for a new video

  • @damiangames1204
    @damiangames1204 3 месяца назад

    Fantastic animations

  • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
    @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork Год назад +3

    Yes! This is AWESOME information! Ham radio operator and HUGE interest in radio here. This is the best explanation I have ever seen of this. I learned so much seeing this video! Thank you! Subbed and belled!

  • @paulboro5278
    @paulboro5278 Год назад

    Please continue this playlist.

  • @kabandajamir9844
    @kabandajamir9844 Год назад

    The world's best teacher thanks sir

  • @shakedmani6899
    @shakedmani6899 11 месяцев назад

    Great work man. appreciated!

  • @dreamer4171
    @dreamer4171 Год назад

    YOU BRILLIANT!!!

  • @anujnayak533
    @anujnayak533 9 месяцев назад

    Brilliant!

  • @ycombinator765
    @ycombinator765 Год назад +1

    I LOVE THIS

  • @fly7188
    @fly7188 Год назад

    I love thinking about math in the context of physics, it really helps

  • @achimbuchweisel2736
    @achimbuchweisel2736 Год назад

    Good Job! Outstanding educational content!

  • @AJ-et3vf
    @AJ-et3vf Год назад

    Great video. Thank you

  • @NunoLima10
    @NunoLima10 Год назад

    This video is amazing

  • @rakeshbhadreshwara8077
    @rakeshbhadreshwara8077 11 месяцев назад

    Awesome Sir with 3D 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🥲👍👍👍

  • @haniamritdas4725
    @haniamritdas4725 Год назад

    Brilliant! Thank you

  • @ericadipalma7518
    @ericadipalma7518 3 месяца назад

    Grazie! ❤️

  • @Edgarbopp
    @Edgarbopp Год назад +1

    Your content is amazing!!

  • @very-mean-spirited-lizard
    @very-mean-spirited-lizard Год назад +4

    I have to deal with real world transmission lines.
    However, my transmission line is much shorter than the wavelength of my generator signal (it is in the kHz range). I just cannot comprehend how standing waves will form in it. Do we need more complicated math for this case? Does your visual explanation still apply analogously?

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад +11

      I think the answer is in the first video of my transmission lines playlist.
      notice that the standing wave pattern repeats each half wavelength of the signal. So if the wavelength is too large compared to the line, there's no standing wave and you can treat the line as a simple wire in circuit theory (super conductive wire with infinitely small dimensions). as a rule of thumb you can use the lumped element model if the line is less than (1/20)*wavelength. Hope that help

  • @DivinoFiatella
    @DivinoFiatella Год назад

    Meraviglioso. Cheers from italy!

  • @turkiyem9465
    @turkiyem9465 Год назад

    Thank you very much.

  • @ndenjoyment6591
    @ndenjoyment6591 4 месяца назад

    Just a dumb question - why we took I is 180 deg shifted from V

  • @nareshkumar4207
    @nareshkumar4207 Год назад

    Please also do a video for waveguide propagation too.

  • @DC4477north
    @DC4477north Год назад

    Thank you

  • @lnz597
    @lnz597 Год назад

    amazing

  • @jonathanrabe3727
    @jonathanrabe3727 Год назад

    You have a new top fan!
    Do you have a patreon?

  • @mquinteros
    @mquinteros Год назад +1

    Excellent video. Which program do you use for the animations?

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад +2

      please read the description

    • @mquinteros
      @mquinteros Год назад

      @@TheSiGuyEN thank you so much! I tried to check the code on git hub link on the description but it says error cannot be found the git repo

  • @WalterKiefer
    @WalterKiefer Год назад

    Wouldn't the power company use a capacitor/inductor to fix the signal coming back so that the impedance of the reflected signal is purely real?

    • @dovhanimakhado2434
      @dovhanimakhado2434 Год назад

      There is virtual no way you to get rid of the characteristic impedance of a transmission line.

  • @luphiax4239
    @luphiax4239 3 месяца назад

    why at 7:16 you say that the current is 180° out of phase if in the graph on the top left corner they are out of phase of 90°

  • @karielf8947
    @karielf8947 Год назад

    Certainly excellent job done on this video, this kind of video is good for VERY intelligent poeple? but I think that not every one could understand, personnaly I did not understang it all, specialy 3D diagrams. The simplier the better

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/gAxt7XA7x6A/видео.html
      look at this from 2:50 to 4:30

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/kK2nIz0R8eA/видео.html
      and this from 00:00 to 0:45

  • @cdes68
    @cdes68 Год назад

    It's aligned in a flux then condensed into a conduit.

  • @keylanoslokj1806
    @keylanoslokj1806 7 месяцев назад

    Why did you stop posting mate. ❤❤❤

  • @SravanKumar-jt1ot
    @SravanKumar-jt1ot Год назад

    Where have you gone a decade ago 😫

  • @bartolomiuschristoffel8108
    @bartolomiuschristoffel8108 Год назад

    Admin, do u have code for this video?

  • @erikeriknorman
    @erikeriknorman Год назад

    Maybe

  • @Drevopol
    @Drevopol Год назад

    Крутой акцент)

  • @Poopoopeepee432hz
    @Poopoopeepee432hz Год назад

    Where’s the attenuation constant?

    • @TheSiGuyEN
      @TheSiGuyEN  Год назад +3

      so far in this playlist we assume lossless lines. I think it would be better to include losses in a separate video.

  • @florincoter1988
    @florincoter1988 Год назад +1

    Voltage does not propagate. It is the measured potential difference between two points. Neither current propagates. It flows. Waves propagate.

    • @bartolomiuschristoffel8108
      @bartolomiuschristoffel8108 Год назад

      Bro do know u alternating current, electric field and capacitance on long transmission line? If u dont know check out him video about transmission line

    • @bartolomiuschristoffel8108
      @bartolomiuschristoffel8108 Год назад

      Did u think this direct current?

  • @catfunt3404
    @catfunt3404 6 месяцев назад

    My professor is cool but god damn I cannot follow him or read his cursive handwritten slides

  • @DeezNutz-ce5se
    @DeezNutz-ce5se Год назад

    Your GitHub link doesn't seem to work?

  • @nareshkumar4207
    @nareshkumar4207 Год назад

    Please also do a video for waveguide propagation too.