Standing wave ratio
In telecommunication, standing wave ratio (SWR) is the ratio of the amplitude of a partial standing wave at an antinode (maximum) to the amplitude at an adjacent node (minimum).The SWR is usually defined as a voltage ratio called the VSWR, for voltage standing wave ratio. It is also possible to define the SWR in terms of current, resulting in the ISWR, which has the same numerical value. The power standing wave ratio (PSWR) is defined as the square of the SWR.
The voltage component of a standing wave in a uniform transmission line consists of the forward wave (with amplitude ) superimposed on the reflected wave (with amplitude ).
Reflections occur as a result of discontinuities, such as an imperfection in an otherwise uniform transmission line, or when a transmission line is terminated with other than its characteristic impedance. The reflection coefficient ρ is defined thus:
- .
- -- maximum negative reflection, when the line is short-circuited,
- -- no reflection, when the line is perfectly matched,
- -- maximum positive reflection, when the line is open-circuited.
At some points along the line the two waves interfere constructively, and the resulting amplitude is the sum of their amplitudes:
- .
- .
The SWR can also be defined as the ratio of the maximum amplitude of the electric field strength to its minimum amplitude, i.e. .
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2 Practical implications of SWR 3 References |
Further analysis
To understand the standing wave ratio in detail, we need to calculate the voltage (or, equivalently, the electrical field strength) at any point along the transmission line at any moment in time. We can begin with the forward wave, whose voltage as a function of time t and of distance x along the transmission line is:
where A is the amplitude of the forward wave, ω is its angular frequency and k is a constant (equal to ω divided by the speed of the wave). The voltage of the reflected wave is a similar function, but spatially reversed (the sign of x is inverted) and attenuated by the reflection coefficient ρ:
- .
- .
- ,
This form of the equation shows, if we ignore some of the details, that the maximum voltage over time at a distance x from the transmitter is the periodic function

It is important to note that this graph does not show the instantaneous voltage profile along the transmission line. It only shows the amplitude of the oscillation at each point. The instantaneous voltage is a function of both time and distance, so could only be shown fully by a three-dimensional or animated graph.
Practical implications of SWR
SWR has a number of implications that are directly applicable to radio use.
References