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Until recently, three principal classes had been known in the
electrical cir cuitry. They were as follows: 1) The lumped-constant
circuit, which should be called a zero-dimensional circuit, in the
sense that the circuit elements are much smaller in size as
compared with the wavelength in all three spatial directions. 2)
The distributed-constant circuit, which should be called a
one-dimensional circuit, in the sense that the circuit elements are
much smaller than the wavelength in two directions but comparable
to the wavelength in one di rection. 3) The waveguide circuit,
which should be called a three-dimensional circuit, in the sense
that the circuit elements are comparable to the wavelength in all
three directions. The principal subject of this book is the
analysis and design (synthesis) theories for another circuit class
which appeared in the late 1960s and became common in the 1970s.
This new circuit class is 4) the planar circuit, which should be
called a two-dimensional circuit, in the sense that the circuit
elements are much smaller in size as compared with the wavelength
in one direction, but comparable to the wavelength in the other two
directions."
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