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Review Sheet

Important Stuff From Physics 442

Vector Identities:

Vector derivatives (gradient, divergence, and curl):
displaymath219

Laplacian Operator:
displaymath225

Vector Identities:

(1)
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(2)
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(3)
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(4)
displaymath252

(5)
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(6)
displaymath269

(7)
displaymath277

(8)
displaymath282

Second derivatives:

(9)
displaymath295

(10)
displaymath298

(11)
displaymath300

Chapter 7

Ohm's Law:
displaymath307
where tex2html_wrap_inline970 is the conductivity, related to the resistivity tex2html_wrap_inline1212 by tex2html_wrap_inline1238. Somtimes the symbol tex2html_wrap_inline1300 is used in place of tex2html_wrap_inline1212 for the resistivity. The resistivity has units of tex2html_wrap_inline1304m.

Electromotive Force:
displaymath314

Faraday's Law:
displaymath319

Motional Emf:
displaymath330

Lenz's Law:

When a magnetic change is made, emf's are induced that oppose the change.

Self Inductance:
displaymath337

Mutual Inductance
displaymath342

Energy Stored in Inductive Circuits:
displaymath350

Magnetic Energy Density:
displaymath354

Magnetic Diffusion Coefficient:
displaymath361

Displacement Current:


displaymath367

Maxwell's Equations:


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displaymath380

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tex2html_wrap_inline1124 and tex2html_wrap_inline1148:
displaymath397

Boundary Conditions:
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where tex2html_wrap_inline1244 is the free surface charge per area and where tex2html_wrap_inline1246 is the free surface current per length.

Charge and Energy Conservation:
displaymath417
where
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tex2html_wrap_inline1068 and V:
displaymath436

Lorentz Gauge and Wave Equations:
displaymath443

Momentum Density:
displaymath453

Maxwell Stress Tensor (pressure and tension):
displaymath458

Time-Dependent Circuits

Loop Rules:

1.  The voltage difference tex2html_wrap_inline1252 along a connecting wire is taken to be zero.

2.  When you traverse a battery, or some other source of emf, in the direction that it tries to pump current, write down
equation469
If you traverse it opposite to its pumping direction write
equation471

3.  If you traverse a capacitor from its negative side to its positive side write
equation473
if you traverse it from plus to minus write
equation475

4.  If you traverse a resistor in the direction of the current flow through it write
equation477
if you traverse it opposite to the current write
equation479

5.  If you traverse an inductor in the direction of the current flow through it write
equation481
if you traverse it opposite to the current write
equation484

6.  At a current junction, incoming current must equal outgoing current.

Circuit Energy Formulas:
displaymath487

Undriven LRC Circuit:
displaymath493

Steady State AC Circuits (ELI the ICEman):


displaymath500

The complex impedance Z of a circuit is obtained by treating inductors and capacitors as if they were resistors in the network. To interpret the meaning of Z it must be put in magnitude-phase form and used as follows:
displaymath506

Useful Identities:
displaymath516

RMS Quantities and Average Power:
displaymath528

Chapter 8

Wave Equation in a Linear Medium:
displaymath537

Solutions of the 1-d Wave Equation:
displaymath544

Standard Sinusoidal Wave Functions:
displaymath550

Energy Density, Poynting Flux, Intensity, Momentum Density:
displaymath564

Disperson Relation and Index of Refraction n:
displaymath574

Reflection and Transmission at Normal Incidence:
displaymath579

Electromagnetic Waves in a Conductor:
displaymath591


displaymath597

Reflection and Transmission from a Conductor:
displaymath606
where
displaymath614

Phase and Group Velocities:
displaymath619

Deriving a Dispersion Relation: Start with Maxwell's curl equations in plane wave form:
displaymath624

Then from somewhere else (Newton's second law, quantum mechanics, Ohm's law, etc.) find a relation between tex2html_wrap_inline1214 and tex2html_wrap_inline1082. (It is sometimes helpful in this regard to recall that current density and particle velocity are related by
displaymath635
where n is the number of particles of charge q per unit volume.) Use this relation to eliminate tex2html_wrap_inline1214 from the plane-wave Maxwell's equations and re-express the right-hand-side of the curl-tex2html_wrap_inline962 equation in terms of a frequency-dependent dielectric constant tex2html_wrap_inline1270. The electromagnetic dispersion relation is then just our old friend
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Waveguide Guide: tex2html_wrap_inline1068 and V

Wave Equations:


displaymath646

Lorentz Condition:


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tex2html_wrap_inline1082 and tex2html_wrap_inline962:


displaymath661

Boundary Conditions:


displaymath668

Dispersion Relation in Rectangular Coordinates:

It is the same for traveling, standing, or combined standing/traveling (waveguide) waves:


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Rectangular Waveguide:

The wave guide is infinitely long in the x-direction and goes from 0 to a in the y-direction and from 0 to b in the z-direction.

Waveguide Waveform:


displaymath679

Two Mode Types

The rather complicated vector eigenvalue problem involved in waveguides turns out to be simpler than might have been thought. There are two distinct types of solutions. One type has tex2html_wrap_inline1290, i.e., the mode electric field only has components perpendicular (or transverse) to the long axis of the wave guide. These are the TE modes. The second type has tex2html_wrap_inline1292, i.e., the mode magnetic field only has components perpendicular (or transverse) to the long axis of the wave guide. These are the TM modes. If you work with tex2html_wrap_inline1082 and tex2html_wrap_inline962, this reduces the number of vector components you need to find from 6 to 5, but if you work with tex2html_wrap_inline1068 and V, as we are doing here, it reduces the number from 4 to 2.

TEtex2html_wrap_inline1302 Modes (tex2html_wrap_inline1304 and V=0):

The condition that tex2html_wrap_inline1290 turns out to require that tex2html_wrap_inline1304 and V=0. Hence, we only have to find tex2html_wrap_inline1314 and tex2html_wrap_inline1316. Applying both the boundary conditions and the Lorentz gauge condition leads to


displaymath89
and
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with
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This condition relates the two amplitudes, but does not determine the overall magnitude. This is determined by the person who shoots the energy into the waveguide.

TEtex2html_wrap_inline1076 and TEtex2html_wrap_inline1078 Special Cases:

If you set either m=0 or n=0 in the amplitude relation above you will see that only one of the vector field components survives.


displaymath713


displaymath717

TMtex2html_wrap_inline1302 Modes (tex2html_wrap_inline1072 and tex2html_wrap_inline1074):

The condition that tex2html_wrap_inline1292 turns out to require that tex2html_wrap_inline1072 and tex2html_wrap_inline1074. Hence, we only have to find tex2html_wrap_inline1338 and V(y,z). Applying both the boundary conditions and the Lorentz gauge condition leads to


displaymath89

displaymath95

TMtex2html_wrap_inline1076 and TMtex2html_wrap_inline1078 Special Cases:

Setting m=0 or n=0 in the formula for tex2html_wrap_inline1350 makes the fields vanish, so tex2html_wrap_inline1352 and tex2html_wrap_inline1354 for TM modes.

TEM Mode:

In a completely hollow guide waves with both tex2html_wrap_inline1356 and tex2html_wrap_inline1358 parallel to the axis of the guide are impossible. But with a conductor along the axis these waves are possible. Their dispersion relation is simply
displaymath736

with tex2html_wrap_inline1360 parallel to the axis of the guide. The electric field points outward from the central conductor and terminates on the outer surface of the guide while the magnetic field circulates around the central conductor and runs parallel to the outer conductor. Hence, they are just about like free space waves with tex2html_wrap_inline1082, tex2html_wrap_inline962, and tex2html_wrap_inline1360 mutually perpendicular. In a cylindrical guide (a coaxial cable) of radius a these waves are described in cylindrical coordinates by
displaymath742
where tex2html_wrap_inline966 is the electric field amplitude at r=a.

Chapter 9

Retarded Potentials and Retarded Time:
displaymath752

Electric Dipole Radiation, Spherical Coordinates: If there is an oscillating dipole at the origin of spherical coordinates tex2html_wrap_inline1440, then the radiation fields and power it produces (far away from the dipole) are
displaymath780
where tex2html_wrap_inline1483 is the retarded time, tex2html_wrap_inline1444 and where the double-dot means tex2html_wrap_inline1446. The average radiated power is
displaymath790
Note that P is the instantaneous power through a distant sphere while <P> is the average power through the same distant sphere.

If the radiation source is a non-relativistic particle, in the power formulas above use tex2html_wrap_inline1452, where tex2html_wrap_inline1454 is the vector position of the particle and a is the magnitude of the acceleration vector of the particle, e.g.,
displaymath798

Griffiths Chapter 10 (Relativity):

The Basics: There are two frames: the unprimed frame is stationary while the primed frame moves with speed v along the x-axis. If a variable is primed, it indicates that it was measured in the moving frame. Unprimed variables indicate quantities measured in the stationary frame.


displaymath806

displaymath810

Lorentz Transformation:
eqnarray823
The inverse transformation is easy: just un-prime the left side, prime the right side, and change v to -v.

Four-Vector Formulation: Relativity is elegantly described by combining space and time (and other physical quantities) into 4-vectors. The space-time 4-vector is
displaymath830
In this formulation the Lorentz transformation involves the following rank-2 tensor (matrix):
displaymath834
Using this tensor and the space-time 4-vector the Lorentz transformation is
displaymath841

Other useful 4-vectors, which all transform exactly the same as tex2html_wrap_inline1757 are:
displaymath853


displaymath862


displaymath871

where proper time tex2html_wrap_inline1759 is time as measured in the frame of a moving particle and where tex2html_wrap_inline1761 is the charge density the frame where locally the current density tex2html_wrap_inline1214 is zero. In the cases of momentum and current, these are not just formal definitions. It is the 4-energy and the 4-momentum that are conserved in collisions and are governed by Newton's second law; and it is the 4-charge density and the 4-current that go into Maxwell's equations to give tex2html_wrap_inline1082 and tex2html_wrap_inline962 in the inertial frame where the equations are being used. Hence we usually forget about the proper velocity and just write
displaymath884
Again: these quantities transform between moving inertial frames just like the tex2html_wrap_inline1757 4-vector.

Lorentz Invariants: As transformations between different inertial frames are made using the 4-vector formulation there is a scalar quantity whose value never changes. For any 4-vector tex2html_wrap_inline1771 this invariant quantity is
displaymath891

Relativistic Kinematics (Collisions): In collisions and disintegrations the relativistic momentum and energy are conserved. The conservation of momentum and energy coupled with the invariant relation tex2html_wrap_inline1773 makes it possible to find conditions after a collision in terms of conditions before.

Relativistic Dynamics: Newton's second law retains its validity in mechanics, provided that it is the relativistic momentum that is used for tex2html_wrap_inline1775:
displaymath898
Note that tex2html_wrap_inline1777 in this equation is just the force we are used to. For instance, in the case of a particle in an electromagnetic field
displaymath903

To solve problems with this equation, solve for the momentum tex2html_wrap_inline1775, then use the definition of the components of tex2html_wrap_inline1775 in terms of tex2html_wrap_inline1783 to find the particle velocity. Except in simple cases this last step is a nightmare.

The transformation law for forces is a little complicated in general, but in one special case it is simple. If the particle is momentarily at rest in the unprimed frame and the force on it is observed from a moving primed frame then
displaymath912

Relativistic Electrodynamics:

As pointed out above, charge density and current get mixed together as we transform between frames, with tex2html_wrap_inline1785 transforming as a 4-vector. The 4-vector formulation also makes the continuity equation take a particularly simple form:
displaymath924

Just like tex2html_wrap_inline1212 and tex2html_wrap_inline1214, the fields tex2html_wrap_inline1082 and tex2html_wrap_inline962 also get mixed together, but they don't transform like 4-vectors. Instead tex2html_wrap_inline1082 and tex2html_wrap_inline962 form a rank-2 tensor (matrix). This formulation is hard to use in practical problems, so the Lorentz transformations for the usual case of a frame moving in the x-direction at speed v will be given separately for each component.
displaymath935

The Electromagnetic Field Tensor:

The electric and magnetic fields fit into the 4-formulation of relativity as components of two rank-2 4-tensors, tex2html_wrap_inline1803 and tex2html_wrap_inline1805:
displaymath949


displaymath955

Maxwell's Equations:

The 4-form of Maxwell's equations is particularly elegant.
displaymath962
In spite of their elegance, the equations are so cryptically packaged that except for fundamental theoretical work they are not used much.

The Potentials V and tex2html_wrap_inline1068 in Relativity:

The scalar potential and the vector potential also (surprise) form a 4-vector:
displaymath970
In terms of tex2html_wrap_inline1811 Maxwell's equations are even more compact than they are in terms of tex2html_wrap_inline1803 and tex2html_wrap_inline1805. Using the Lorentz guage the connections between the fields and the potentials becomes symbolically very simple
displaymath976

The Lorentz gauge becomes symbolically simple:
displaymath987

And finally, if we define a special symbol for the wave-equation operator (which also looks elegant in the 4-formulation)
displaymath993
then Maxwell's equations in terms of V and tex2html_wrap_inline1068 can be written in the most compact form of all:
displaymath1000


next up previous
Next: Waveguide Guide Up: No Title Previous: History

Ross Spencer
Tue Apr 13 10:47:17 MDT 1999