Distortion Less Line
Distortion Less Line
Distortion Less Line
doc 1/6
ω
vp =
β
where:
β = Im {γ }
= Im { ( R + j ω L)( G + j ωC ) }
Thus, for a lossy line, the phase velocity v p is a function of
frequency ω (i.e., v p (ω ) )—this is bad!
1
vp = [R = 0, G = 0 ]
LC
γ = (R + j ω L )(G + j ωC )
= LC (R L + j ω )(G C + j ω )
Then IF:
R G
=
L C
we find:
γ = LC (R L + j ω )(G C + j ω )
= LC (R L + j ω )(R L + j ω )
= (R L + j ω ) LC
C
=R + j ω LC
L
Thus:
C
α = Re {γ } = R
L
β = Im {γ } = ω LC
ω 1
vp = =
β LC
3/1/2005 The Distortionless Line.doc 5/6
A:
3/1/2005 The Distortionless Line.doc 6/6
“Oliver Heaviside was born in the same London slums as Dickens. Scarlet fever left him partly
deaf. He compensated with shyness and sarcasm. Heaviside finished his only schooling in 1865. He was
16 and a top student, but he'd failed geometry. He loathed all that business of deducing one fact from
another. He meant to invent knowledge -- not to compute it.
He invented this strange new math by leaping over logic. It was a powerful tool, but it wasn't rigorous.
Only people like Kelvin, Rayleigh, and Hertz saw the brilliance that was driving Heaviside faster than
method could follow. He knew what he was doing. He growled at his detractors, "Shall I refuse my
dinner because I do not fully understand ... digestion?"
Like vector analysis, Heaviside's calculus stood the test of time. So did the rest of his work. He gave
us the theory for long distance telephones. His math has served and shaped engineering. Yet his
biographer, Paul Nahin, writes a sad ending. Heaviside grew sick of fighting and faded off to Torquay
in Southwest England. There he lived out his last 25 years in a bitter retreat. You don't see much of
Heaviside's name today. But his magnificent works have been woven into the fabric of our textbooks.
He deserved a better end. Yet his huge accomplishments force a happy ending on a sad life.” (Taken
from http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi426.htm)