Solutions To Problems in Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, Third Edition
Solutions To Problems in Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, Third Edition
B
,
t
B=
1 E
c2m t
where cm is the speed of light in the medium. We begin by applying the first
curl equation to our ansatz (1), obtaining
y Ez ikEy = iBx
x Ez + ikEx = iBy
x Ey y Ex = iBz ,
(2)
(3)
(4)
By x Ez ,
k
k
i
Ey = Bx y Ez .
k
k
(5)
x Bz + ikBx = i 2 Ey
cm
x By y Bx = i 2 Ez .
cm
y Bz ikBy =
(6)
(7)
(8)
But in (5) we solved for Ex and Ey , and if we then plug those solutions into (6)
and (7) we can solve for Bx and By in terms of Bz and Ez :
ikc2
Bx = 2 m2 2 x Bz + 2 y Ez
(9)
k cm
cm k
ikc2
By = 2 m2 2 y Bz 2 x Ez .
(10)
k cm
cm k
Finally, with the ansatz (1) the equation B = 0 reads
Bx
By
+
= ikBz .
x
y
When we plug (9) and (10) into this, the terms involving Ez fields cancel, and
we obtain an equation involving Bz alone:
2
2
2
2
+ 2 Bz +
k Bz = 0
x2
y
c2m
or
2
2
+
x2
y 2
Bz + 2 Bz = 0
(11)
where
2
k2.
c2
If we had carried out this derivation in the reverse order we would have obtained
the same equation for Ez :
2
2
Ez + Ez = 0.
(12)
+
x2
y 2
=
We can think of equations (11) and (12) as eigenvalue equations that have solutions only for certain values of the parameter , which depend on the boundary
conditions.
Armed with equations (11) and (12) and the boundary conditions appropriate to our problem we can now solve for Bz and Ez and then use (9) and (10)
to find the remaining components of the B field. The remaining components of
the E field are given by analogous equations:
ikc2m
2 k 2 c2m
ikc2
Ey = 2 m2 2
k cm
Ex =
y Bz
k
y Ez x Bz .
k
x Ez +
(13)
(14)
TM Modes
TE Modes
Bz 0
Ez 0
2t Ez + 2 Ez = 0,
Ex =
Ey =
En
ikc2m
x Ez
2 k 2 c2m
ikc2m
y Ez
2 k 2 c2m
i
y Ez
2 k 2 c2m
i
x Ez
By = 2
k 2 c2m
Bx =
=0
2t Bz
+ Bz = 0,
Bn
=0
n S
ic2m
y Bz
2 k 2 c2m
ic2m
Ey = 2
x Bz
k 2 c2m
ikc2
Bx = 2 m2 2 x Bz
k cm
ikc2
By = 2 m2 2 y Bz
k cm
Ex =
kc2m
=
(x Ez )2 + (y Ez )2 e2i(kzt)
2
2
2
2
( k cm )
SzTM =
2( 2
(15)
k
(x Bz )2 + (y Bz )2 .
4
2
(16)
= ( i) E
E
(17)
(18)
since in most cases. (For example, for a copper waveguide with air
or vacuum interior we have we have 6 107 1 m1 , while 9
1012 1 m1 ( in rad/sec), so the approximation is good up to frequencies
1019 rad/sec.)
Now we assume that the fields are only changing significantly in the direction normal to the boundary surface (i.e., as we go deeper and deeper into the
boundary surface the fields die out rapidly, whereas as we move along parallel
to the boundary surface the fields dont change much) and keep only the normal
derivative in the curl equations. If measures the depth of penetration into the
surface, the curl equations become
E
= iB
B
= E
Differentiating the first of these, taking the cross product with of both sides,
and substituting in the second equation yields
2E
= iE
2
= iE.
2
2
Evidently the component of the LHS vanishes here, so E = 0; the electric
field within the conducting boundary has no component normal to the surface.
For the remaining components we obtain
2 Ek
+ iEk = 0
2
with solution
Ek = e
=e
(1+i)
E0
E0
p
where = 2/ is the skin depth and E0 is the field just at the surface of
the boundary. To keep the solution from blowing up as we penetrate into the
conductor we take the negative sign in the exponent. From (17) we then obtain
B=
i1
(
E0 )e(1+i) .
Evaluating this at the surface yields the modified boundary condition on the
fields in the cavity or waveguide:
B0 =
i1
(
E0 ).
(19)
From this equation we can work out the power loss per unitR length in the
cavity
or waveguide. The power dissipated in a volume dV is (J E) dV =
R
E 2 dV. We integrate over the volume occupied by the boundary surfaces in
a length dz :
I Z
2 2(1+i)
dP = dz
E0 e
d dl e2i(kzt)
0
I
2
= dz
E0 dl e2i(kzt)
2(1 + i)
or, taking the time average,
dP
=
dz
4 2
E02 dl
(20)
where the line integral is over the cross section of the surface boundary at a
fixed value of z.