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Chapter 35. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves. To understand a laser beam, we need to know how electric and magnetic fields change with time. Examples of time-dependent electromagnetic phenomena include high-speed circuits, transmission lines, radar, and optical communications.
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Chapter 35. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves To understand a laser beam, we need to know how electric and magnetic fields change with time. Examples of time-dependent electromagnetic phenomena include high-speed circuits, transmission lines, radar, and optical communications. Chapter Goal: To study the properties of electromagnetic fields and waves.
Chapter 35. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves Topics: • E or B? It Depends on Your Perspective • The Field Laws Thus Far • The Displacement Current • Maxwell’s Equations • Electromagnetic Waves • Properties of Electromagnetic Waves • Polarization
Maxwell’s equations are a set of how many equations? • Two • Three • Four • Five • Six
Maxwell’s equations are a set of how many equations? • Two • Three • Four • Five • Six
Maxwell introduced the displacement current as a correction to • Coulomb’s law. • Gauss’s law. • Biot-Savart’s law. • Ampère’s law. • Faraday’s law.
Maxwell introduced the displacement current as a correction to • Coulomb’s law. • Gauss’s law. • Biot-Savart’s law. • Ampère’s law. • Faraday’s law.
The law that characterizes polarizers is called • Malus’s law. • Maxwell’s law. • Poynting’s law. • Lorentz’s law.
The law that characterizes polarizers is called • Malus’s law. • Maxwell’s law. • Poynting’s law. • Lorentz’s law.
Experimenter A creates a magnetic field in the laboratory. Experimenter B moves relative to A. Experimenter B sees • just the same magnetic field. • a magnetic field of different strength. • a magnetic field pointing the opposite direction. • just an electric field. • both a magnetic and an electric field.
Experimenter A creates a magnetic field in the laboratory. Experimenter B moves relative to A. Experimenter B sees • just the same magnetic field. • a magnetic field of different strength. • a magnetic field pointing the opposite direction. • just an electric field. • both a magnetic and an electric field.
E or B? It Depends on Your Perspective Whether a field is seen as “electric” or “magnetic” depends on the motion of the reference frame relative to the sources of the field.
E or B? It Depends on Your Perspective The Galilean field transformation equations are where V is the velocity of frame S'relative to frame S and where the fields are measured at the same point in space by experimenters at rest in each reference frame. NOTE: These equations are only valid if V << c.
Ampère’s law Whenever total current Ithrough passes through an area bounded by a closed curve, the line integral of the magnetic field around the curve is The figure illustrates the geometry of Ampère’s law. In this case, Ithrough = I1−I2 .
The Displacement Current The electric flux due to a constant electric field E perpendicular to a surface area A is The displacement current is defined as Maxwell modified Ampère’s law to read
EXAMPLE 35.3 The fields inside a charging capacitor QUESTION:
Electromagnetic Waves • Maxwell, using his equations of the electromagnetic field, was the first to understand that light is an oscillation of the electromagnetic field. Maxwell was able to predict that • Electromagnetic waves can exist at any frequency, not just at the frequencies of visible light. This prediction was the harbinger of radio waves. • All electromagnetic waves travel in a vacuum with the same speed, a speed that we now call the speed of light.
Properties of Electromagnetic Waves Any electromagnetic wave must satisfy four basic conditions: • The fields Eand B and are perpendicular to the direction of propagation vem.Thus an electromagnetic wave is a transverse wave. • Eand B are perpendicular to each other in a manner such that E× Bis in the direction of vem. • The wave travels in vacuum at speed vem = c • E = cBat any point on the wave.
Properties of Electromagnetic Waves The energy flow of an electromagnetic wave is described by the Poynting vector defined as The magnitude of the Poynting vector is The intensity of an electromagnetic wave whose electric field amplitude is E0 is
Radiation Pressure It’s interesting to consider the force of an electromagnetic wave exerted on an object per unit area, which is called the radiation pressure prad.The radiation pressure on an object that absorbs all the light is where I is the intensity of the light wave. The subscript on prad is important in this context to distinguish the radiation pressure from the momentum p.
EXAMPLE 35.5 Solar sailing QUESTION:
Malus’s Law Suppose a polarized light wave of intensity I0 approaches a polarizing filter. θis the angle between the incident plane of polarization and the polarizer axis. The transmitted intensity is given by Malus’s Law: If the light incident on a polarizing filter is unpolarized, the transmitted intensity is In other words, a polarizing filter passes 50% of unpolarized light and blocks 50%.