short version : 29. maxwell’s equations & em waves

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Short Version : 29. Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

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Short Version : 29. Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves. 29.1. The Four Laws of Electromagnetism. 4 Laws of EM (incomplete). How q produces E ; E lines begin & end on q’s. Gauss for E. No magnetic monopole; B lines form loops. Gauss for B. Changing  B gives emf. Faraday. Ampere - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Short Version : 29. Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Page 2: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.1. The Four Laws of Electromagnetism

Law Mathematical Statement

Physical Meaning

Gauss for E0

qd

E A How q produces E;E lines begin & end on q’s.

Gauss for B

Faraday

Ampere(Steady I only)

4 Laws of EM (incomplete)

0d B A

Bddd t

E r

0d IB r

No magnetic monopole;B lines form loops.

Changing B gives emf.

Moving charges give B.

Note E-B asymmetry between the Faraday & Ampere laws.

Page 3: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.2. Ambiguity in Ampere’s Law

B in a RC circuit.

Ampere’s law: 0Cd IB r

I is current through any open surface S bounded by C.

Current flows through surfaces 1,2,& 4. But not 3. Ampere’s law fails ( for non-steady current ).

Maxwell’s modification:

0 0 0E

C

dd Id t

B r

0 Displacement curre ntEdd t

Changing E gives I , which in turn gives B.

Page 4: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.3. Maxwell’s Equations

Law Mathematical Statement

Physical Meaning

Gauss for E0

qd

E A How q produces E;E lines begin & end on q’s.

Gauss for B

Faraday

Ampere-Maxwell

0d B A

Bddd t

E r

No magnetic monopole;B lines form loops.

Changing B gives emf.

Moving charges & changing E give B.0 0 0

Edd Id t

B r

Maxwell’s Eqs (1864).Classical electromagnetism.

Page 5: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Maxwell’s Equations in Vacuum

Gauss for E 0d E A

Gauss for B

Faraday

Ampere-Maxwell

0d B A

Bddd t

E r

0 0Edd

d t

B r

Page 6: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.4. Electromagnetic Waves

Electromagnetic (EM) waves

Faraday’s law:

Ampere-Maxwell’s law:

changing B gives E.

changing E gives B.

Page 7: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Plane Electromagnetic Wave

EM wave in vacuum is transverse: E B k (direction of propagation).

For uniqueness, see Prob 46

Sinusoidal plane waves going in x-direction:

ˆ, ,yx t E x tE j

ˆ, ,zx t B x tB k

ˆ k E B Right-hand rule

ˆsinpE kx t j

ˆsinpB kx t k

Page 8: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Gauss’s Laws

ˆsinpE kx t j

Both E & B field lines are straightlines,

so their flux over any closed surfaces vanish identically.

Hence the Gauss’s laws are satisfied.

Plane wave : ˆ, ,yx t E x tE j

ˆ, ,zx t B x tB k ˆsinpB kx t k

Page 9: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Faraday’s Law

For loop at x of height h & width dx :

, ,d E x t h E x dx t h E r

, , EE x t h E x t d x hx

E d x hx

B B h dx Bd B h dxd t t

Faraday’s Law : E Bx t

Faraday’s law expressed as a differential eq :t

BE

Bddd t

E r

ˆEE y

ˆBB z

y zE Bx t

x y z

x y zV V V

i j k

V

d E A dt

B A

Page 10: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Ampere-Maxwell Law

0 0E

C

ddd t

B r

C

d B x h B x dx h B r

I = 0

For loop at x of height h & width dx :

, , BB x t h B x t d x hx

B d x hx

E E h dx Ed E h dxd t t

Ampere-Maxwell Law : 0 0B Ex t

Ampere-Maxwell law expressed as a differential eq :

0 0 t

EB in vacuum

ˆBB z

ˆEE y

0 0yz EB

x t

Page 11: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Conditions on Wave Fields

Faraday’s Law : E Bx t

Ampere-Maxwell Law : 0 0B Ex t

For E = E(x,t) j & B = B(x,t) k,

For a plane wave ˆ, sinpx t E kx t E j ˆ, sinpx t B kx t B k

cos cosp pk E k x t B k x t Faraday’s Law : p pk E B

Ampere-Maxwell Law : 0 0cos cosp pk B k x t E k x t

0 0p pk B E

x y z

x y zV V V

i j k

V

Page 12: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.5. Properties of Electromagnetic Waves

p pk E B 0 0p pk B E

2 20 0k

0 0

1k

speed of wave =

7 2 2 29

114 10 / /

4 9 10N A C N m

83 10 /m s = speed of light in vacuum = c

Maxwell: light is EM wave.

1983: meter is defined so that c is exactly 299,792,458 m/s.

Hence, 0 = 1 / (4 c2 107 ) C2/Nm2, where c = 299,792,458.

Page 13: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Example 29.2. Laser LightA laser beam with wavelength 633 nm is propagating through air in the +z direction.

Its electric field is parallel to the x axis and has magnitude 6.0 kV/m. Find

(a) the wave frequency,

(b) the amplitude of the magnetic field, and

(c) the direction of the magnetic field.

cf

(a)8

9

3.0 10 /633 10

m sm

144.7 10 Hz

EBc

(b)

(c) y axis.

3

8

6.0 10 /3.0 10 /

V mm s

52.0 10 T

20 T

Page 14: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

PolarizationPolarization // E.

Radiation from antennas are polarized.

E.g., radio, TV, ….

Light from hot sources are unpolarized.

E.g., sun, light bulb, …

Reflection from surfaces polarizes.E.g., light reflecting off car hoods is partially polarized in horizontal direction.

Transmission through crystal / some plastics polarizes.E.g., Polaroid sunglasses, …

Law of Malus :

Only component of E // preferred direction e is transmitted.

2 2 2costrans inc E E

ˆ ˆtrans inc E E ε ε ˆcosincE ε = angle between Einc & .

2costrans incS S or

ˆˆ ε j

ˆˆ ε k

Page 15: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

20 cosS S

2 polarizers with mutually perpendicular transmission axes.

No light gets through where they overlap.

Polarization of EM wave gives info about its source & the medium it passes through.

Applications: astronomy, geological survey, material stress analysis, …

Liquid crystal display (LCD)

Vertical polarizer passes only Ev .

Unpolarized light

LC molecules rotate polarization to horizontal direction.

Horizontal polarizer passes light.

Applied V aligns molecules; polarization not rotated.

Horizontal polarizer blocks light.

Page 16: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Conceptual Example 29.1. Crossed Polarizers

Unpolarized light shines on a pair of polarizers with their transmission axes perpendicular, so no light gets through the combination.

What happens when a third polarizer is sandwiched in between, with its transmission axes at 45 to the others?

1st & middle polarizers not so some light passes through.

Passed light’s polarization not to axis of last polarizer so some light passes through.

Page 17: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Making the Connection

How does the intensity of light emerging from this polarizer “sandwich” compare with the intensity of the incident unpolarized light?

2costrans incS S

Intensity of light emerging from 1st polarizer :

22

10

1 cos2incS S d

12 incS ( polarized along axis of 1st polarizer )

Intensity of light emerging from middle polarizer :

22 1 cos 45S S 1

12S

14 incS

Intensity of light emerging from ensemble :

23 2 cos 45S S 2

12S

18 incS

( polarized along axis of middle polarizer.)

( polarized along axis of 3rd polarizer.)

Page 18: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.6. The Electromagnetic Spectrum

Earth’s atmosphere:

Transparent to: most radio, visible light.

Opaque to: most IR, upper UV, X-rays, rays.

UV is absorbed by ozone layer

IR by green house gases.

Page 19: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.7. Producing Electromagetic Waves

Any changing E or B will create EM waves.

Any accelerated charge produces radiation.

Radio transmitter: e’s oscillate in antenna driven by LC circuit.

X-ray tube: accelerated e’s slammed into target.

MW magnetron tube: e’s circle in B.

EM wave :f = f of q motionMost efficient: ~ dimension of emitter / reciever

Waves emit / receive axis of dipole.

Source replenishes radiated energy

LC oscillator drives I in antenna

Outgoing EM waves

Page 20: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

29.8. Energy & Momentum in Electromagetic Waves

Consider box of thickness dx, & face A k of EM wave.

20

12Eu EEnergy densities:

2

0

12Bu

B

Energy in box:

E BdU u u A dx 2 20

0

1 12

A dx

E B

Rate of energy moving through box:/

dU d Udt dx c

2 20

0

1 12

A c

E B

Intensity S = rate of energy flow per unit area 2 20

0

1 12

S c

E B

Plane waves:

EBc

00

1 12

S c E B cc

2

0 00

1 12

c E B

0

1 E B

Page 21: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

0

1S E B

Plane waves:

In general:0

1

S E B Poynting vector see Prob 64

Average intensity for plane waves :

0

1S E B

0

12

pk pkE B

E, B in phase

2

0

12pkEc

2

0

12pkBc

Page 22: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Example 29.3. Solar Energy

The average intensity of noontime sunlight on a clear day is about 1 kW/m2.

(a) What are the peak electric & magnetic fields in sunlight ?

(b) At this intensity, what area of 40% efficient solar collectors would you need to replace a

4.8-kW water heater ?

62.9 10 T

(a)2

0

12pkBS c

02

pkSB

c

7 3 2

8

2 4 10 / 10 /3 10 /H m W m

m s

2.9 T

pk pkE c B 28.7 10 /V m 0.87 /kV m

(b)Area needed is 2

2

4.8 1240% 1.0 /

kW mkW m

Page 23: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Waves from Localized Sources

Afar from localized source, wave is spherical :

24PSr

Intensity = power / area

2 2,S E B 1,E Br

wave fields dominates static fields away from the sources.

Page 24: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Example 29.4. Cell Phone Reception

A cell phone’s typical average power output is about 0.6 W.

If the receiver at a cell tower can handle signals with peak electric fields as weak as 1.2 mV/m,

what is the maximum allowable distance from cell phone to tower ?

24PSr

02

24 pk

c PrE

2

0

12pkEc

7 8

23

2 4 10 / 3 10 / 0.6

4 1.2 10 /

H m m s W

V m

5 km

Page 25: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Application: Cell Phones

Hexagonal cell area 25 km2.

~ circle of radius

6 225 10 mr

2.8 km

Transmission & reception are at different frequencies.

Page 26: Short Version : 29.  Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves

Momentum & Radiation Pressure

Maxwell :

1 ˆrad U

cp S

1rad c

P S

radiation momentum

radiation pressureon absorbing surface

12rad cP S

radiation pressureon reflecting surface

Cosmos 1, a solar light-sailing spacecraft, failed at launch in 2005.