Examples of Uniform EM Plane Waves
Examples of Uniform EM Plane Waves
Outline Reminder of Wave Equation Reminder of Relation Between E & H Energy Transported by EM Waves (Poynting Vector) Examples of Energy Transport by EM Waves
d E dl = ( dt C
B dA)
C
d = J dA + dt S
H dl
E dA
Source free
Bx
In free space
where
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Bx
Inside a material
where
A m
H x = H x + + H x = E y + + E y
V m
Like the propagation velocity, the intrinsic impedance is independent of the source and is determined only by the properties of the medium.
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Imaginary numbers are noted differently in science and engineering disciplines. While scientists use I, engineers use j. The relation between the two is as follows:
Both scientists and engineers think that their version of the imaginary number is equal to and independently, over time, they developed equations for identical physical relations that can now only be reconciled if i is set to be equal to -j
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Bx
so that
Bx
In free space
Spatial quantities:
Temporal quantities:
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P =c A
WE WM + V V
2WM =c V = |E | | H |
Poynting Vector, named after John Henry Poynting (1852-1914)
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Poynting s Theorem
Ampere Faraday
d E ( H = J + oE) dt
H ( E =
d o H ) dt
0=
E H dS +
Wave transport of energy from V through S
d J E dV + dt
1 1 ( o E E + o H H ) dV 2 V 2
Energy storage within V
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EM Power Flow
Q: How does power flow from the battery to the light bulb? i A: Through the EM fields, which are guided by the wires.
+
v
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EM Power Flow
Poynting s Theorem also explains how electrical energy flows from the source through the transformer to the light bulb in the circuit below.
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peak differential pressure po power transmitted/area peak electric field Eo power transmitted/area
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A2 =
I2 =
4I1 = 2
I1 = 2A1
Pop - Question
If you added the two sinusoidal waves shown in the top plot, what would the result look like ?
(a)
(b)
(c)
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y1 = A1 cos(t kz ) and
Spatial dependence of 2 waves at t=0: Resultant wave:
y2 = A1 cos(t kz + )
Trig identity:
( t kz + ) 2
Oscillation
y = 2 A1 cos( / 2) cos( t kz + / 2)
Amplitude
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.
Infrared
Ultraviolet
Hard X-rays
Visible
Soft X-rays
Gamma rays
Sources
Microwave oven 10-7 10-6 10-5 10-4 Light bulb 1 101 102 103 104 Radioactive elements 105 106
AM radio
10-9 10-8
ultraviolet light
|
600 nm
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500 nm
400 nm
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What is approximate E required to spontaneously ionize an atom within one cycle? {we want energy transferred qE to roughly exceed electron binding energy within nominal orbital diameter d }
Image by Jasper84 (Metaveld BV) <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lasersnijden_laserkop.jpg> on Wikimedia, also used for <http://www.metaveld.com>
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What are I, f, E , H for a cell phone radiating 1-watt of power over 1 m2 of Uniform Plane Waves at 1 GHz? The energy intensity of sunlight shining on Earth is on the order of ~1000 W/m2. What is the amplitude corresponding E field ?
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If we are going to power the World with solar-generated energy, how much land area has to be covered with Solar Cells?
sun satellite World Land Area =149 million km2 World Land/Water Area =510 million km2 US Land Area (48 states) 7.5 million km2 atmosphere Earth World Consumed Energy at the rate of 15.8 TW in 2006 US consumed Energy at the rate of 3TW
sun at ~37:
844 W/m2
1353 W/m2
Photovoltaics
-The average power incident upon the surface of the Earth from sunlight is ~10,000 times the average global power consumption. - The average power incident upon the continental United States is ~500 times our national consumption (total energy consumption, not just electricity). If ~2% of the continental United States is covered with PV systems with a net efficiency of 10% we would be able to supply all the US energy needs
(Note: This is an overestimate. We need only 0.35% of US land for PV electricity generation) (Note: 40% of our land is allocated to producing food)
60,000+ farms,
90,000+ farms
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2. No Electric of Magnetic field in direction of propagation 3. Electric field normal to magnetic field 4. Value of electric field is times that of magnetic field at each instant 5. Direction of propagation given by E H 6. Energy stored in electric field per unit volume at any instant at any point is equal to energy stored in magnetic field
8. Superposition of EM Plane waves of same frequency and phase adds their electric fields.
Intensity =
P ower = |E | | H | Area
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