I never asserted, nor did I deny the existence of XX.
But...That is not what I asked. I do not care if you believe the JXX's existence or not. I repeatedly asked for sources that said canards are irrelevant to RCS prediction and reduction. Where are they?
All right, tell me wether a conductive surface is conducive to surface waves?
Of course it does. Your deception so far is to impose the word and meaning of 'superconduction' and associates to what I originally said. Here is the proper definition of the word 'conducive'...
Superconductivity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
When superconductive, a material has an electrical resistance of exactly zero.
Conducive - Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary
: tending to promote or assist
Nothing of 'conducive' is about 'superconductivity', does it? A surface wave, by definition, cannot exist unless there is a surface. So when I said that a surface is conducive to surface waves, that does not mean I equate superconductivity with any surface. It mean exactly what the dictionary said -- to promote. But regarding the question of whether any surface can be a conductor or be conducive/conductive to surface waves, there are no shortages of popular literature using the word 'conductive'
WITHOUT associating the word with 'superconductivity'...
RADIO SURFACE WAVE ANTENNA - Patent 3705407
An antenna for radio surface waves may be constructed from a conductor such as a tube or a flat plate which is an even multiple of wavelengths long.
Radio propagation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Surface modes
In this mode the radio wave propagates by interacting with the semi-conductive surface of the earth. The wave "clings" to the surface and thus follows the curvature of the earth.
Low-power radar stations enhance maritime-domain awareness | SPIE Newsroom: SPIE
HFDR exploits ducting (or tunneling) of radio waves along the conductive seawater surface.
Do you see any associations to 'superconductivity' in the examples above? We have water, ground and unnamed materials as being conducive -- promoting -- surface waves. But nothing at all about superconductivity. You need to fire whoever is coaching you in this debate. Neither of you know what you are talking about and so both of you end up grasping at this language straw in trying to prove me wrong.
Again for your easy reading, at popular science level, refer to the following article:
Electromagnetic Surface Waves
In fact, surface EM waves (SEMWs) are still not fully understood. Attempting to change the fact by being a fundamentalist just wont work:
http://iopscience.iop.org/1063-7869/51/1/L06/pdf/PHU_51_1_L06.pdf
Just because we do not fully understood surface wave properties, that does not mean we cannot exploit it, and you have not proved I changed any facts. If anything, I have exposed more Chinese fanboys' made up 'facts' than you care to admit.
I feel really sorry that you made another joke when I asked you about the supporting wave in my leading questions.
There is no such thing called supporting wave.
The 'supporting wave' wording is
YOURS. Not mine. I said that a surface wave is supported or kept alive or sustained by the power of the transmission itself, whereas the creeping wave eventually die from energy loss
IF the electrical path is long enough.
Incident EM field and free electron distribution in a conductor (or polarization of the medium if not conductive) are at equilibrium instantly (in general), through the interface. They affect each other in the establishment of the EM wave around the interface and beyond. The field in the vacuum is caused by Hertz radiation of the (radar) source and by excited electrons in the medium (a good approximation is dipole approximation). If the incident wave and excited wave are in phase, the field in the vacuum(or the medium where the source is) but close to the interface will be enhanced; if they are out of phase, theyll be cancelled. So-called Brewsters angle
Brewster's angle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia is when incident wave and wave excited by the dipoles in the medium happen to cancel each other completely. In this case,
a radar (or whatever) detector will not get any reflection, if the polarization of the source is parallel (or is a P wave).
If...???
Here is what the Brewster's Angle, or polarization, said...
Brewster's angle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brewster's angle (also known as the polarization angle) is an angle of incidence at which light with a particular polarization is perfectly transmitted through a surface, with no reflection.
The polarization that cannot be reflected at this angle is the polarization for which the electric field of the light waves lies in the same plane as the incident ray and the surface normal (i.e. the plane of incidence).
In effect, you are saying that a canard should be dismissed as a factor in RCS prediction/reduction methods because of the
CHANCE that a properly polarized radar transmission with respect to the canard itself will not produce any reflection. You are asking radar engineers the world over to disregard, not just the canard, but effectively
ANY flight control surface as a factor in RCS prediction/reduction just on this
CHANCE?
Readers,
This is what I mean about making up facts and distortions of ideas by many of the Chinese members of this forum and their exposure. The question is whether or not canards on an aircraft -- JXX -- is a contributor to its overall RCS. All the world's technical literature, derived from controlled laboratory experiments to field experience, says -- Yes.
Mr. gpit so far have been unable to bring to the debate not even a single credible source that says -- No. Although two or more sources are desirable. So in order to equate the JXX to the F-22's stature, thereby also elevating Chinese aviation, he resort to the tactic of 'data mining' in breaking down a scattering point's components, of which polarization is part, and bring to the fore only the component(s) that, no matter how specious, will support his assertion or belief. Am not saying that polarization does not exist, am saying that
Mr. gpit deliberately discard everything else that are at least of equal, if not more, important factors.
So according to
Mr. gpit here, the JXX will analyze the seeking radar's polarization, continuously adjust its aspect angle to match, and proceed to the target totally undetected because the aircraft will not produce any reflections. Considering we are dealing with the speed of light for the radar transmission and the constant flight attitude readjustments to match polarizations by the aircraft, these Chinese pilots must be nothing short of Supermen to withstand the physical stresses.
But there is an interesting component regarding polarization that
Mr. gpit conveniently omit...Anisotropic material...
Isotropy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Isotropy is uniformity in all directions. Precise definitions depend on the subject area. The word is made up from Greek iso (equal) and tropos (direction). Exceptions, or inequalities, are frequently indicated by the prefix an, hence anisotropy. Anisotropy is also used to describe situations where properties vary systematically, dependent on direction.
Anisotropy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
...is the property of being directionally dependent, as opposed to isotropy, which implies homogeneity in all directions. It can be defined as a difference, when measured along different axis, in a material's physical property (absorbance, refractive index, density, etc.) An example of anisotropy is the light coming through a polarizer.
Wood is a naturally anisotropic material. Its properties vary widely when measured with the growth grain or against it. For example, wood's strength and hardness will be different for the same sample if measured in differing orientation.
Wood is an anisotropic material. Iron is an isotropic material.
Synthetic aperture radar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radar waves have a polarization. Different materials reflect radar waves with different intensities, but anisotropic materials such as grass often reflect different polarizations with different intensities. Some materials will also convert one polarization into another. By emitting a mixture of polarizations and using receiving antennae with a specific polarization, several different images can be collected from the same series of pulses.
Composites such as those used in aviation are usually anisotropic materials. When an EM wave penetrate an anisotropic material to any degree, that portion of the wave become a 'trapped wave'. Composites can -- not must -- be stratified, meaning the different materials that made up said composite resides at different layers. Stratifications in a composite are conducive to trapped waves. I hope
Mr. gpit does not associate the word 'conducive' here to 'superconductivity'
Anyway...As the readers can also infer, composites are radar absorbers to some degree. Vegetation is considered anisotropic with stratifications and is a natural radar absorber to some degree.
RADAR Overview
In the context of forest vegetation mapping, the wavelength of the RADAR system will determine whether the SAR backscatter is dominated by surface scattering or volume scattering. When relatively short-wavelength (i.e. 3 cm for X-band) microwave energy interacts with the surface of the forest canopy, the energy is scattered by small-scale components of the canopy, such as the foliage and small branches. Therefore at these wavelengths the RADAR energy reflects mainly from the surface of the canopy (Figure 2). In contrast, RADAR energy with relatively long wavelengths (i.e. 74 cm for P-band) will penetrate into the canopy and reflect from large scale components composing the canopy, including large branches, stems, and the terrain surface.
The above is an excellent example of how different freqs behave in a composite with stratifications of diverse materials.
Composites also have what is called the 'permitivity matrix'...
MRS Website : The permittivity at X-band frequencies of nickel-coated graphite fibers in an epoxy matrix
In this study, we have investigated the microwave dielectric behavior of a composite formed by embedding nickel-coated graphite fibers in an epoxy matrix. Permittivities of composites in the X-band frequency range as a function of fiber concentration, fiber length, and the degree of fiber aggregation were studied. Fiber aggregation was reduced significantly by the addition of silica particles to the composite mixture before epoxy curing. Predictions from the mean field theory fit the experimental data well at dilute fiber concentrations.
At the much smaller scale in this debate, when we have a trapped wave in a composite, the different materials in the composite, with their different levels of permitivity, will alter the wave's polarization, and we have already seen how that is possible on the larger scale with vegetation. When the wave can no longer penetrate the composite, the wave will be re-radiated to free space and will most likely have an elliptical polarization, making this particular diffraction field, or scattering point, a contributor to an aircraft's RCS. But no matter what, the Brewster's Angle effect is best when the material is isotropic and the surface is
STATIONARY. An aircraft is a complex body with diverse shapes and surfaces and in flight, it cannot be stationary. Of course, to
Mr. gpit and his fellow Chinese members here, the JXX will be operating in an alternate universe under different laws of physics.