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Transmission line
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==Overview== Ordinary electrical cables suffice to carry low frequency [[alternating current]] (AC), such as [[mains power]], which reverses direction 100 to 120 times per second, and [[audio signal]]s. However, they are not generally used to carry currents in the [[radio frequency]] range,<ref name="Jackman">{{cite book | last = Jackman | first = Shawn M. |author2=Matt Swartz |author3=Marcus Burton |author4=Thomas W. Head | title = CWDP Certified Wireless Design Professional Official Study Guide: Exam PW0-250 | publisher = John Wiley & Sons | year = 2011 | pages = Ch. 7 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=AQ8WJGshLBEC&pg=PT300 | isbn = 978-1118041611}}</ref> above about 30 kHz, because the energy tends to radiate off the cable as [[radio wave]]s, causing power losses. Radio frequency currents also tend to reflect from discontinuities in the cable such as [[electrical connector|connectors]] and joints, and travel back down the cable toward the source.<ref name="Jackman" /><ref name="Oklobdzija">{{cite book | last = Oklobdzija | first = Vojin G. | author2=Ram K. Krishnamurthy | title = High-Performance Energy-Efficient Microprocessor Design | publisher = Springer Science & Business Media | year = 2006 | pages = 297 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=LmfHof1p3qUC&pg=PA297 | isbn = 978-0387340470}}</ref> These reflections act as bottlenecks, preventing the signal power from reaching the destination. Transmission lines use specialized construction, and [[impedance matching]], to carry electromagnetic signals with minimal reflections and power losses. The distinguishing feature of most transmission lines is that they have uniform cross sectional dimensions along their length, giving them a uniform [[Electrical impedance|impedance]], called the ''[[characteristic impedance]]'',<ref name="Oklobdzija" /><ref name="Guru">{{cite book | last = Guru | first = Bhag Singh |author2=Hüseyin R. Hızıroğlu | title = Electromagnetic Field Theory Fundamentals, 2nd Ed. | publisher = Cambridge Univ. Press | year = 2004 | pages = 422–423 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=qzNdDtZUPXMC&pg=PA422 | isbn = 978-1139451925}}</ref><ref name="Schmitt">{{cite book | last = Schmitt | first = Ron Schmitt | title = Electromagnetics Explained: A Handbook for Wireless/ RF, EMC, and High-Speed Electronics | publisher = Newnes | year = 2002 | pages = [https://archive.org/details/electromagnetics0000schm/page/153 153] | url = https://archive.org/details/electromagnetics0000schm | url-access = registration | isbn = 978-0080505237}}</ref> to prevent reflections. Types of transmission line include parallel line ([[ladder line]], [[twisted pair]]), [[coaxial cable]], and [[planar transmission line]]s such as [[stripline]] and [[microstrip]].<ref name="Carr">{{cite book | last = Carr | first = Joseph J. | title = Microwave & Wireless Communications Technology | publisher = Newnes | year = 1997 | location = USA | pages = 46–47 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1j1E541LKVoC&pg=PA46 | isbn = 978-0750697071}}</ref><ref name="Raisanen">{{cite book | last = Raisanen | first = Antti V. |author2=Arto Lehto | title = Radio Engineering for Wireless Communication and Sensor Applications | publisher = Artech House | year = 2003 | pages = 35–37 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=m8Dgkvf84xoC&pg=PA35 | isbn = 978-1580536691}}</ref> The higher the frequency of electromagnetic waves moving through a given cable or medium, the shorter the [[wavelength]] of the waves. Transmission lines become necessary when the transmitted frequency's wavelength is sufficiently short that the length of the cable becomes a significant part of a wavelength. At frequencies of [[microwave]] and higher, power losses in transmission lines become excessive, and [[waveguide]]s are used instead,<ref name="Jackman" /> which function as "pipes" to confine and guide the electromagnetic waves.<ref name="Raisanen" /> Some sources define waveguides as a type of transmission line;<ref name="Raisanen" /> however, this article will not include them.
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