lecture 37: fri 19 nov ch.33 electromagnetic waves i heinrich hertz (18571894) physics 2113 jonathan...

Download Lecture 37: FRI 19 NOV Ch.33 Electromagnetic Waves I Heinrich Hertz (18571894) Physics 2113 Jonathan Dowling

If you can't read please download the document

Upload: brett-wilkinson

Post on 18-Jan-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

A solution to the Maxwell equations in empty space is a “traveling wave”… The electric-magnetic waves travel at the speed of light? Light itself is a wave of electricity and magnetism! Maxwell, Waves, and Light electric and magnetic fields can travel in EMPTY SPACE!

TRANSCRIPT

Lecture 37: FRI 19 NOV Ch.33 Electromagnetic Waves I Heinrich Hertz (18571894) Physics 2113 Jonathan Dowling Maxwell Equations in Empty Space: Fields without sources? Changing E gives B. Changing B gives E. A solution to the Maxwell equations in empty space is a traveling wave The electric-magnetic waves travel at the speed of light? Light itself is a wave of electricity and magnetism! Maxwell, Waves, and Light electric and magnetic fields can travel in EMPTY SPACE! First person to use electromagnetic waves for communications: Guglielmo Marconi ( ), 1909 Nobel Prize (first transatlantic commercial wireless service, Nova Scotia, 1909) Electromagnetic waves First person to prove that electromagnetic waves existed: Heinrich Hertz ( ) A solution to Maxwells equations in free space: Visible light, infrared, ultraviolet, radio waves, X rays, Gamma rays are all electromagnetic waves. Electromagnetic Waves 33.3: The Traveling Wave, Qualitatively: Figure 33-4 shows how the electric field and the magnetic field change with time as one wavelength of the wave sweeps past the distant point P in the last figure; in each part of Fig. 33-4, the wave is traveling directly out of the page. At a distant point, such as P, the curvature of the waves is small enough to neglect it. At such points, the wave is said to be a plane wave. Here are some key features regardless of how the waves are generated: 1. The electric and magnetic fields and are always perpendicular to the direction in which the wave is traveling. The wave is a transverse wave. 2. The electric field is always perpendicular to the magnetic field. 3. The cross product always gives the direction in which the wave travels. 4. The fields always vary sinusoidally. The fields vary with the same frequency and are in phase with each other. Radio waves are reflected by the layer of the Earths atmosphere called the ionosphere. This allows for transmission between two points which are far from each other on the globe, despite the curvature of the earth. Marconis experiment discovered the ionosphere! Experts thought he was crazy and this would never work. Electromagnetic Waves: One Velocity, Many Wavelengths! with frequencies measured in Hertz (cycles per second) and wavelength in meters. 33.2: Maxwells Rainbow: Visible Spectrum: Fig The wavelength/frequency range in which electromagnetic (EM) waves (light) are visible is only a tiny fraction of the entire electromagnetic spectrum. Maxwells Rainbow Fig (33-2) An LC oscillator causes currents to flow sinusoidally, which in turn produces oscillating electric and magnetic fields, which then propagate through space as EM waves. Fig Oscillation Frequency: Next slide The Traveling Electromagnetic (EM) Wave, Qualitatively (33-3) 33.3: The Traveling Wave, Quantitatively: The dashed rectangle of dimensions dx and h in Fig is fixed at point P on the x axis and in the xy plane. As the electromagnetic wave moves rightward past the rectangle, the magnetic flux B through the rectangle changes and according to Faradays law of induction induced electric fields appear throughout the region of the rectangle. We take E and E + dE to be the induced fields along the two long sides of the rectangle. These induced electric fields are, in fact, the electrical component of the electromagnetic wave. 33.4: The Traveling Wave, Quantitatively: Fig The sinusoidal variation of the electric field through this rectangle, located (but not shown) at point P in Fig. 33-5b, E induces magnetic fields along the rectangle.The instant shown is that of Fig. 33-6: is decreasing in magnitude, and the magnitude of the induced magnetic field is greater on the right side of the rectangle than on the left. 33.4: The Traveling Wave, Quantitatively: 33.3: The Traveling Wave, Qualitatively: We can write the electric and magnetic fields as sinusoidal functions of position x (along the path of the wave) and time t : Here E m and B m are the amplitudes of the fields and, and k are the angular frequency and angular wave number of the wave, respectively. The speed of the wave (in vacuum) is given by c. Its value is about 3.0 x10 8 m/s. Fig Mathematical Description of Traveling EM Waves Electric Field:Magnetic Field: Wave Speed: Wavenumber: Angular frequency: Vacuum Permittivity: Vacuum Permeability: All EM waves travel a c in vacuum Amplitude Ratio: Magnitude Ratio: EM Wave Simulation (33-5) Electromagnetic waves are able to transport energy from transmitter to receiver (example: from the Sun to our skin). The power transported by the wave and its direction is quantified by the Poynting vector. John Henry Poynting ( ) The Poynting Vector: Points in Direction of Power Flow Units: Watt/m 2 For a wave, since E is perpendicular to B: In a wave, the fields change with time. Therefore the Poynting vector changes too!! The direction is constant, but the magnitude changes from 0 to a maximum value. The average of sin 2 over one cycle is : Both fields have the same energy density. or, EM Wave Intensity, Energy Density A better measure of the amount of energy in an EM wave is obtained by averaging the Poynting vector over one wave cycle. The resulting quantity is called intensity. Units are also Watts/m 2. The total EM energy density is then Solar Energy The light from the sun has an intensity of about 1kW/m 2. What would be the total power incident on a roof of dimensions 8m x 20m ? I = 1kW/m 2 is power per unit area. P=IA=(10 3 W/m 2 ) x 8m x 20m=0.16 MegaWatt!! The solar panels shown (BP-275) has dimensions 47in x 29in. The incident power is then 880 W. The actual solar panel delivers 75W (4.45A at 17V): less than 10% efficiency. The electric meter on a solar home runs backwards Entergy Pays YOU!