Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
The preceding chapters were focused on the mathematical foundations of infinite electrical networks, existence and uniqueness theorems being their principal result. Generality was a concomitant aim of those discussions. For the remaining chapters, we shift our attention to particular kinds of networks (namely, the infinite cascades and grids) that are more closely related to physical phenomena. Two examples of this significance were given in Section 1.7, and more will be discussed in Chapter 8. Our proofs will now be constructive, and consequently methods for finding voltage-current regimes will be encompassed. Moreover, various properties of voltage-current regimes will examined.
We must now be specific about any network we hope to analyze. In particular, its graph and element values need to be stipulated everywhere. An easy way of doing this is to impose some regularity upon the network. Most of this chapter (Sections 6.1 to 6.8) is devoted to the simplest of such regularities, the periodic two-times chainlike structures. They are 0-networks appearing in two forms. One form will be called a one-ended grounded cascade and is illustrated in Figure 6.1; it has an infinite node as one of its spines, and a one-ended 0-path as the other spine. The other form will be called a one-ended ungrounded cascade and is shown in Figure 6.2; in this case, both spines are one-ended 0-paths. The third possibility of both spines being infinite nodes is a degenerate case and will not be discussed.
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