Bob Kupps wrote: > So I modeled a half wave dipole in free space and sure enough the wire > segments on each side of the feed point carried equal current. I then placed > a resistive load at the center of one half-element (to simulate? a lossy > "return") and now see that those segments no longer carry equal currents, > with less current on the side with the load. Can someone please explain this? > > >
You are misinterpreting what you are seeing. When you put a resistor in one side of a dipole you modify the current distribution in both sides of the dipole and the side with the resistor has a large decrease in current at the point where the load is located. So the current distribution is considerable different in the two halves of the dipole. The source is at the center of a segment. Since you can only measure the current at the center of the segments adjacent to the feedpoint (that's one segment away, on each side, from the feedpoint) the current will be different. That one segment difference away from the feedpoint is enough to show a difference in current. If you want to see the current at the feedpoint use the "Src Dat" tab. It only lists a single current because it's the same in both sides, except 180 degrees out of phase. It's impossible to violate the law stated by Tom. If you want an easy way to test this, wire a battery to a bulb, measure the magnitude of current out the negative terminal of the battery and then measure the current out the positive terminal of the battery. If you don't get the same answer, you have a measurement error. Jerry, K4SAV _______________________________________________ UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK