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Find the propagation speed in terms of physical parameters for both the coaxial cable and twisted pair examples.

In both cases, the answer depends less on geometry than on material properties. For coaxial cable, c 1 μ d ε d . For twisted pair, c 1 μ ε d 2 r δ 2 r d 2 r .

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By using the second of the transmission line equation [link] , we can solve for the current's complex amplitude. Consideringthe spatial region x 0 , for example, we find that x V x γ V x R 2 f L I x which means that the ratio of voltage and current complex amplitudes does not depend on distance.

V x I x R 2 f L G 2 f C Z 0
The quantity Z 0 is known as the transmission line's characteristic impedance . Note that when the signal frequency is sufficiently high, the characteristic impedance is real, whichmeans the transmission line appears resistive in this high-frequency regime.
f Z 0 L C
Typical values for characteristic impedance are 50 and 75 Ω.

A related transmission line is the optic fiber. Here, the electromagnetic field is light, and it propagates down acylinder of glass. In this situation, we don't have two conductors—in fact we have none—and the energy ispropagating in what corresponds to the dielectric material of the coaxial cable. Optic fiber communication has exactly thesame properties as other transmission lines: Signal strength decays exponentially according to the fiber's space constant andpropagates at some speed less than light would in free space. From the encompassing view of Maxwell's equations, the onlydifference is the electromagnetic signal's frequency. Because no electric conductors are present and the fiber is protected byan opaque “insulator,” optic fiber transmission is interference-free.

From tables of physical constants, find the frequency of a sinusoid in the middle of the visible light range. Comparethis frequency with that of a mid-frequency cable television signal.

You can find these frequencies from the spectrum allocation chart . Light in the middle of the visible band has a wavelength ofabout 600 nm, which corresponds to a frequency of 5 14 Hz . Cable television transmits within the same frequency band asbroadcast television (about 200 MHz or 2 8 Hz ). Thus, the visible electromagnetic frequencies are over sixorders of magnitude higher!

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To summarize, we use transmission lines for high-frequency wireline signal communication. In wireline communication, wehave a direct, physical connection—a circuit—between transmitter and receiver. When we select the transmission linecharacteristics and the transmission frequency so that we operate in the high-frequency regime, signals are not filteredas they propagate along the transmission line: The characteristic impedance is real-valued—the transmissionline's equivalent impedance is a resistor—and all the signal's components at various frequencies propagate at the samespeed. Transmitted signal amplitude does decay exponentially along the transmission line. Note that in the high-frequencyregime the space constant is approximately zero, which means the attenuation is quite small.

What is the limiting value of the space constant in the high frequency regime?

As frequency increases, 2 f C G and 2 f L R . In this high-frequency region,

γ 2 f L C 1 G 2 f C 1 R 2 f L
γ 2 f L C 1 1 2 1 2 f G C R L γ 2 f L C 1 2 G L C R C L Thus, the attenuation (space) constant equals the real part of this expression, and equals a f G Z 0 R Z 0 2 .

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Source:  OpenStax, Fundamentals of electrical engineering i. OpenStax CNX. Aug 06, 2008 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col10040/1.9
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