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Vector Analysis (Continued) : EE 2513: Electromagnetic Fields and Waves
Vector Analysis (Continued) : EE 2513: Electromagnetic Fields and Waves
Lecture 2:
Vector Analysis (continued)
Cylindrical and Spherical Coordinate Systems
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Cartesian Coordinates
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Relations for Basis Vectors (Continued)
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Scalar and Vector Product in Cartesian Coordinates
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Vector or Cross Product (Properties)
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Cylindrical Coordinates
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z
Cylindrical representation uses: ρ ,f , z ρ
P
A A aˆ Af aˆf Az aˆ z z
âz x f y
UNIT VECTORS:
âf
aˆ aˆ f aˆ z
â
The Unit Vectors imply :
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Cylindrical Coordinates
The point P(ρ1,f1,z1) is located as the intersection of
three mutually perpendicular surfaces:
– ρ= ρ1 (a circular cylinder)
– ϕ= ϕ1 (a half-plane containing the z-axis)
– z=z1 (a plane)
The base vectors are aˆ , aˆf , aˆ z
– â is a unit vector in the direction of increasing ρ
– âf is a unit vector in the direction of increasing f
– âz is a unit vector in the direction of increasing z
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Cylindrical Coordinates (continued)
The base vectors satisfy the following relations:
aˆ aˆf aˆ z â
aˆf aˆ z aˆ
aˆ z aˆ aˆf
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ρ1
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Cylindrical Coordinates (continued)
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Cylindrical Coordinates (continued)
Consider an arbitrary vector in cylindrical
coordinates:
A A aˆ
A A aˆ Af aˆf Az aˆ z
Af A aˆf
Az A aˆ z
Consider another arbitrary vector:
B B aˆ Bf aˆf Bz aˆ z
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Spherical Coordinates
Geographers specify a location
on the Earth’s surface using three
scalar values: longitude, latitude,
and altitude.
Both longitude and latitude are
angular measures, while altitude
is a measure of distance.
Latitude, longitude, and altitude
are similar to spherical coordinates.
Spherical coordinates consist of
one scalar value (r), with units of
distance, while the other two
scalar values (θ, ϕ) have angular
units (degrees or radians).
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A Ar aˆ r Aq aˆq Af aˆf q P
r
âf
UNIT VECTORS:
x f y
âr
aˆ r aˆ q aˆf
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Spherical Coordinates
For spherical coordinates, r (0≤r<∞)
expresses the distance of the point from
the origin (i.e., similar to altitude).
Angle θ (0 ≤θ ≤π) represents the angle
formed with the z-axis (i.e., similar to
latitude).
Angle ϕ (0≤ϕ<2π) represents the
rotation angle around the z-axis,
precisely the same as the cylindrical
coordinate ϕ.
Thus, using spherical coordinates, a
point in space can be unambiguously
defined by one distance and two angles.
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âr âr
âr
âr
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Spherical Coordinates (continued)
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Spherical Coordinates (continued)
Scalar (dot) product:
A B Ar Br Aq Bq Af Bf
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