1.
WAVES & PHASORS
Chapter 1 Overview
Examples of EM Applications
Dimensions and Units
Fundamental Forces of Nature
Gravitational Force
Gravitational constant
Force exerted on mass 2 by mass 1
Gravitational field induced by mass 1
Charge: Electrical property of particles
Units: coulomb
One coulomb: amount of charge accumulated in one second by a current of one ampere.
1 coulomb represents the charge on ~ 6.241 x 1018 electrons
Charge of an electron
e = 1.602 x 10-19 C
Charge conservation
Cannot create or destroy charge, only transfer
Electrical Force
Force exerted on charge 2 by charge 1
Permittivity
Electric Field In Free Space
Permittivity of free space
Electrical insulator that can be polarized by an applied electric field.
Electric Field Inside Dielectric Medium
Polarization of atoms changes
electric field
New field can be accounted for by
changing the permittivity
Permittivity of the material
Another quantity used in EM
is the electric flux density D:
Magnetic Field
Electric charges can be isolated, but magnetic poles always exist in pairs
(North-South).
Magnetic field induced by a
current in a long wire
Tesla
Magnetic permeability of free space
B=µH Magnetic field intensity (A/m)
Electric and magnetic fields are
connected through the speed of light:
Static vs. Dynamic
Static conditions: charges are stationary or moving, but if moving, they do so at a constant
velocity.
Charges
at rest
DC current
Maxwell
AC current
Equations
Under static conditions, electric and magnetic fields are independent,
but under dynamic conditions, they become coupled.
Traveling Waves
Waves carry energy
Waves have velocity
Many waves are linear: they do not affect the
passage of other waves; they can pass right through
them
Transient waves: caused by sudden disturbance
Continuous periodic waves: repetitive source
Types of Waves
Sinusoidal Waves in Lossless Media
y = height of water surface
x = distance
Wave Frequency and Period
where w is the angular velocity of the wave and ß is
its wavenumber, both defined as
Direction of Wave Travel
Wave travelling in +x direction
Wave travelling in ‒x direction
+x direction: if coefficients of t and x have opposite signs
‒x direction: if coefficients of t and x have same sign (both positive
or both negative)
Phase Lead & Lag
Wave Travel in Lossy Media
Attenuation factor
Example 1-1: Sound Wave in Water
Given: sinusoidal sound wave traveling in
the positive x-direction in water
Wave amplitude is 10 N/m2, and p(x, t) was
observed to be at its maximum value at t = 0
and x = 0.25 m. Also f=1 kHz, λ=1.5 m
Determine: p(x,t)
Solution:
The EM Spectrum
Tech Brief 1: LED Lighting
When a voltage is applied in a forward-
Incandescence is Fluoresce means to emit biased direction across an LED diode,
the emission of radiation in consequence current flows through the junction and
light from a hot to incident radiation of a some of the streaming electrons are
object due to its shorter wavelength captured by positive charges (holes).
temperature Associated with each electron-hole
recombining act is the release of energy
in the form of a photon.
Tech Brief 1: LED Basics
Tech Brief 1: LED Lighting Cost Comparison
Complex Numbers
We will find it is useful to represent j 1
sinusoids as complex numbers
z x jy Rectangular coordinates Re z x
z z z e j Polar coordinates Im( z ) y
Relations based
on Euler’s Identity
e j cos j sin
Relations for Complex Numbers
Euler.
Change polar to rectangular.
Change rectangular to polar.
Conjugate.
Addition, subtraction, multiplication, division.
Learn how to perform these with your calculator.
Phasor Domain
Phasor counterpart of
Phasor Relation for Resistors
Current through resistor
Time domain
Time Domain Frequency Domain i I m cos t
iR RI m cos t
Phasor Domain
V RI m
Phasor Relation for Inductors
Time domain
Time Domain Phasor Domain
Phasor Relation for Capacitors
Time domain
Time Domain
Phasor Domain
Example 1-4: RL Circuit
Cont.
Example 1-4: RL Circuit cont.