An electromagnetic wave consists of energy being transmitted down the transmission line or antenna.
This energy is in two forms, an electric field and a magnetic field, which fluctuate constantly, with a continuing exchange between electrical and magnetic energy.
In a traveling wave, the magnetic and electric fields that simultaneously peak at he same places and simultaneously go to zero at the same places.
I read somewhere the word "wave constructively". Never heard that in radio frequency, rather it is civil architecture ??.
If this is the example that ensures that the antenna radiates as collinear??.
I see the "constructive" Current 2.37 VERY CONFINED IN THE MEDIA AND WEAK UPPER WAVE, and current alleged "in phase" BETWEEN 0.00535-0 - And -0.00535, ie WITHOUT ANY PROFIT.
no see
You actually took a stab at what was wrong with the image I posted? You are wrong of course. But you gave the appearance of an attempt... A week after it was issued.
I issued a challenge, and gave you the answer in the very same post, I basically gave it to you and you still do not see. Hmm, I guess that is where nosee comes from.
Of course the currents are low, this picture, as the one you posted that I was responding to,
is in the process of changing phase. Those moments in time when the antenna is changing phase is the time the displayed currents are going to be the weakest. If you are going to use any one image of a time based set of images of an antennas radiation pattern there is one and only one thing to look for, and that is the picture that shows a current maximum, or the strongest field strength, which conveniently happens at, get this, the current maximum... Go figure... Any other image is at best a manipulation, at worst incompetence.
You did manage to say one accurate thing about the picture, but in the process completely missed the reality of what is happening...
For the record, the correct answer was, and is, context. The picture you posted, and the one I posted in my reply were both out of context with how the antenna works.
Hmm the word "wave constructively"? That isn't one word, that is two words. What likely happened is your translator failed miserably at translation. I have checked this entire thread and those words aren't next each other at any point before your post mentioning them. The word "wave" is generally used to refer to "wavelength" although it can be used in other ways within the field, or even other descriptions. The word "constructively" is basically a fancy word for "add". Those words being used together would likely be a reference to a wave of some sort, and how it constructively adds to something else. I suppose context would be the ultimate decider here... Oh look, there is that word again...
The DB