Summary
EE Science II Laboratory #10
Transmission Lines and Standing Wave Ratio
Transmission lines refer to structures that guide electromagnetic energy from one point to another. Examples of transmission lines include coaxial cables that connect television sets to antennas or internet modems to phone lines, microstrips printed on circuit boards like the ones in your phone, optical fibers that carry high-bandwidth signals over large distances, etc. Study of transmission line theory is essential for high-frequency circuit design where the ratio of line length to the wavelength of operation is not negligible unlike wires and interconnects used in low- frequency circuits. In such cases, electromagnetic signals undergo phase shifts resulting from significant time delays when traveling through the transmission line and some portion of it may even be reflected at the load!
You will be introduced to the basics of transmission line theory in this laboratory. During the course of this laboratory, you will:
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