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Chapter 32C - Electromagnetic

Waves
AA PowerPoint
PowerPoint Presentation
Presentation by
by
Paul
Paul E.
E. Tippens,
Tippens, Professor
Professor of
of Physics
Physics
Southern
Southern Polytechnic
Polytechnic State
State University
University
© 2007
Objectives: After completing this
module, you should be able to:
• Explain and discuss with appropriate diagrams
the general properties of all electromagnetic
waves.
• Discuss and apply the mathematical relationship
between the electric E and magnetic B
components of an EM wave.
• Define and apply the concepts of energy density,
intensity, and pressure due to EM waves.

Much of this material


This module is NOTcheck
is OPTIONAL: in Tippens Textbook
with instructor.
Maxwell’s Theory
Electromagnetic
Electromagnetic theory
theory developed
developed by
by James
James
Maxwell
Maxwell (1831
(1831 –– 1879)
1879) isis based
based on
on four
four concepts:
concepts:
1.
1. Electric
Electric fields
fields EE begin
begin on
on positive
positive charges
charges andand
end
end on
on negative
negative charges
charges andand Coulomb’s
Coulomb’s lawlaw
can
can be
be used
used toto find
find the
the field
field EE and
and the
the force
force
on
on aa given
given charge.
charge.

q
E
4 00r 22

+ q11 q22 - F  qE
Maxwell’s Theory (Cont.)
2.
2. Magnetic
Magnetic field lines 
field lines  do
do not
not begin
begin or
or end,
end,
but
but rather
rather consist
consist ofof entirely
entirely closed
closed loops.
loops.


B
A sin 

q
B
qv sin 
Maxwell’s Theory (Cont.)
3.
3. AA changing
changing magnetic field B
magnetic field B induces
induces an
an emf
emf
and
and therefore
therefore an
an electric
electric field
field EE (Faraday’s
(Faraday’s Law).
Law).

Faraday’s Law: A change in flux can


occur by a change in area or
 by a change in the B-field:
E = -N
t  = B A  = A B
Maxwell’s Theory (Cont.)
4.
4. Moving
Moving charges
charges (or(or an
an electric
electric current)
current) induce
induce
aa magnetic
magnetic field
field B.
B.

Solenoid Current I B
l I B
induces x
B B field x
x
x
R 0 NI x
B x
Inductance L
 Lenz’s law
Production of an Electric Wave
Consider two metal rods connected to an ac
source with sinusoidal current and voltage.

Arrows show field vectors (E)


-
+

+ E Wave
-
Vertical transverse sinusoidal E-waves.
An Alternating Magnetic Field
The ac sinusoidal current also generates a
magnetic wave alternating in and out of paper.

Inward B Outward B -
+
I I
r
X

r In r
Out
X •
B B +
-
A Magnetic Wave Generation
The generation of a magnetic wave
due to an oscillating ac current.

+ Arrows show magnetic field vectors (B)


-
I
r

B B - Wave
-
+
Horizontal transverse sinusoidal B-waves.
An Electromagnetic Wave
An electromagnetic wave consists of combination
of a transverse electric field and a transverse
magnetic field perpendicular to each other.

+ Arrows show field vectors

-
EM wave propagation in space
Transmitting and Receiving
An ac current generates an EM wave which then
generates an ac signal at receiving antenna.
A B-field Moves Past a Charge
Relativity tells us that there is no preferred frame of
reference. Consider that a magnetic field B moves at
the speed of light c past a stationary charge q:

c Stationary Charge q experiences a


N magnetic force F
positive charge
q B F  qcB or
F
 cB
q
S
c But electric field E = F/q:
E
Substitution shows: E  cB c
B
An E-field Moves Past a Point
A length of wire l moves at velocity c past point A:
A current I is simulated.
A
E r In time t, a length of wire
l = ct passes point A
c
++++++ q q
Charge density:   
Wire moves at  ct
velocity c past E
A In time t: q = ct
Thus, the current I is: Simulated current I:
q  ct
I   c I  c
t t
Moving E-field (Cont.)
A A B-field is created by the
E r simulated current: I   c
c 0 I 0 c
++++++ B 
2 r 2 r
E

Recall from Gauss’ law: Eliminating  from these


two equations gives:

E
2 0 r B   0 0 cE
The Speed of an EM Wave
For EM waves, we have seen: A
E E r
c B   0 0 cE c
B ++++++
Substituting E = cB into
latter equation gives: E
B   0 0 c(cB)
EM-waves travel at the
1 speed of light, which is:
c
 0 0 c = 3.00 x 108 m/s
Important Properties for All
Electromagnetic Waves
• EM waves are transverse waves. Both E and
B are perpendicular to wave velocity c.
• The ratio of the E-field to the B-field is
constant and equal to the velocity c.
Energy Density for an E-field
Energy density u is the energy per unit volume
(J/m3) carried by an EM wave. Consider u for the
electric field E of a capacitor as given below:

Energy density u U U
A d u 
for an E-field: Vol. Ad
0 A
Recall C  and V  Ed :
d Energy
U 1
 AdE
density u:
2
u  2 0

1 0
U  2 CV  2 
1 2  A
 ( Ed ) 2 uAd 1
2 0 E 2
Ad
 d 
Energy Density for a B-field
Earlier we defined the energy density u for a B-field
using the example of a solenoid of inductance L:
0 N 2 A
l L ; U  LI ; V  A
1
2
2


A 0 NI NI B
R
B  
  0

U 0 N I 2 2 2
Energy density B
u  for B-field:
u
A 2 2
2 0
Energy Density for EM Wave

The energy of an EM wave is shared equally by


the electric and magnetic fields, so that the
total energy density of the wave is given by:
2
B
Total energy density: u   0 E 
1 2
2
20
Or, since energy is B2
u  0E2 
shared equally: 0
Average Energy Density
The E and B-fields fluctuate between their
maximum values Em and Bm. An average value
of the energy density can be found from the
root-mean-square values of the fields:
Em Bm
Erms  and Brms 
2 2

The average energy density uavg is therefore:

uavg   0 E
1
2
2
m or uavg   0 E 2
rms
Example 1: The maximum amplitude of an
E-field from sunlight is 1010 V/m. What is
the root-mean-square value of the B-field?
Em 1010 V/m
Bm    3.37  T EM
c 8
3 x 10 m/s wave
Bm 3.37  T
Brms   ; Brms  2.38  T
2 1.414 Earth

What is the average energy density of the wave?


uavg   0 E  (8.85 x 10
1
2
2
m
1
2
-12 Nm 2
C2
)(1010 V/m)

J Note that the total energy


uavg  4.47 x 10 -9

m3 density is twice this value.


Wave Intensity I
The intensity of an EM wave is defined as the
power per unit area (W/m2).
EM wave moves distance ct P
I
through area A as shown below: A
Area A
Total energy = density x volume
Total energy = u(ctA)
ct
P Total E uctA
I    uc A
A TimeArea tA

And Since Total intensity: P


I  uc
u =  I  c 0 E 2
m
A
Calculating Intensity of Wave
In calculating intensity, you must
distinguish between average
P
values and total values: I
A
IT  c 0 Em2  2c 0 Erms
2 Area A

I avg  12 c 0 Em2
I avg  12 c 0 Em2  c 0 Erms
2

Since E = cB, we can also express I in terms of B:


c 2c c c
IT  B 
2
B2
I avg  B 
2 2
Brms
0 0 20 0
m rms m
Example 2: A signal received from a radio
station has Em = 0.0180 V/m. What is the
average intensity at that point?
The average intensity is:

I avg  12 c 0 Em2

I avg  (3 x 10 m/s)(8.85 x 10
1
2
8 -12 Nm 2
C2
)(0.018 V/m) 2

I avg  4.30 x 10-7 W/m 2


Note that intensity is power per unit area. The
power of the source remains constant, but the
intensity decreases with the square of distance.
Wave Intensity and Distance
The intensity I at a distance r
from an isotropic source:
P P
I 
A 4 r 2
The average power of the A
source can be found from the
intensity at a distance r :
For power falling on
For isotropic conditions: surface of area A:
P  AI avg  (4 r ) I avg
2
P = Iavg A
Example 3: In Example 2, an average intensity
of 4.30 x 10-7 W/m2 was observed at a point. If
the location is 90 km (r = 90,000 m) from the
isotropic radio source, what is the average
power emitted by the source?
P
I avg   2.39 x 10 -5
W/m 2
90 km 4 r 2
P = (4r2)(4.30 x 10-7 W/m2)

P = 4(90,000 m)2(4.30 x 10-7 W/m2)


Average power
of transmitter:
PP == 43.8
43.8 kW
kW

This assumes isotropic propagation, which is not likely.


Radiation Pressure
EM-waves not only carry energy, but also carry
momentum and exert pressure when absorbed
or reflected from objects.
Radiation Force
Recall that Power = F v Pressure Area
P Fc F I A
I  or 
A A A c
The pressure is due to the transfer of momentum.
The above relation gives the pressure for a
completely absorbing surface.
Radiation Pressure (Cont.)
The change in momentum for a fully reflected
wave is twice that for an absorbed wave, so
that the radiation pressures are as follows:

Absorbed wave: Reflected wave:


Radiation Force Radiation Force
Pressure Area Pressure Area
A A

F I F 2I
 
A c A c
Example 4: The average intensity of direct
sunlight is around 1400 W/m2. What is the
average force on a fully absorbing surface of
area 2.00 m2?
Absorbed wave: For absorbing F I
Radiation Force

surface: A c
Pressure Area
IA
A F
c
2 2
(1400 W/m )(2.00 m )
F FF == 9.33
9.33 xx 10
10-6-6 NN
3 x 108 m/s
The Radiometer
AA radiometer
radiometer isis aa device
device which
which demonstrates
demonstrates
the
the existence
existence ofof radiation
radiation pressure:
pressure:

One
One side
side ofof the
the panels
panels isis
black
black (totally
(totally absorbing)
absorbing)
and
and the
the other
other white
white
(totally
(totally reflecting).
reflecting). The
The
panels
panels spin
spin under
under light
light
due
due to
to the
the pressure
pressure
differences.
differences. Radiometer
Summary

 EM waves are transverse waves. Both E


and B are perpendicular to wave velocity c.
 The ratio of the E-field to the B-field is
constant and equal to the velocity c.
 Electromagnetic waves carry both energy
and momentum and can exert pressure on
surfaces.
Summary (Cont.)
EM-waves travel at the
speed of light, which is: E c 1
c
B  0 0
c = 3.00 x 108 m/s

2
B
Total Energy Density: u   0 E 
1 2
2
20
Em Bm
Erms  and Brms 
2 2
Summary (Cont.)
The average energy density:

uavg   0 E
1
2
2
m or uavg   0 E 2
rms

I avg  c 0 E  c 0 E
1
2
2
m
2
rms

Intensity and Totally Totally


Distance Absorbing Reflecting
F I F 2I
P
I 
P
 
A 4 r 2 A c A c
CONCLUSION: Chapter 32C
Electromagnetic Waves

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