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Prs w13d1 Qonly

The objectives of this course are to tease out the laws of electromagnetism from our everyday experience by specific examples of how electromagnetic phenomena manifest themselves. We want to be able: To describe, in words, the ways in which various concepts in electromagnetism come into play in particular situations; To represent these electromagnetic phenomena and fields mathematically in those situations; And to predict outcomes in other similar situations. The overall goal is to use the scientific method to come to understand the enormous variety of electromagnetic phenomena in terms of a few relatively simple laws.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
112 views2 pages

Prs w13d1 Qonly

The objectives of this course are to tease out the laws of electromagnetism from our everyday experience by specific examples of how electromagnetic phenomena manifest themselves. We want to be able: To describe, in words, the ways in which various concepts in electromagnetism come into play in particular situations; To represent these electromagnetic phenomena and fields mathematically in those situations; And to predict outcomes in other similar situations. The overall goal is to use the scientific method to come to understand the enormous variety of electromagnetic phenomena in terms of a few relatively simple laws.

Uploaded by

akirank1
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PRS30

The E field of a plane EM wave is


E( z , t ) = ˆjE0 sin( kz + ω t )
The magnetic field of this wave is given by
1. B( z , t ) = ˆiB0 sin(kz + ω t )
2. B( z , t ) = −ˆiB0 sin(kz + ω t )
B ( z , t ) = ˆ B sin( kz + ω t )
k
3. 0

4. B( z , t ) = −kˆ B0 sin( kz + ω t )
5. Don't Have A Clue
PRS30

The B field of a plane EM wave is


B( y , t ) = kˆ B0 sin( ky − ωt )
The electric field of this wave is given by
E ( y , t ) = ˆjE sin( ky − ωt )
1. 0

2. E( y , t ) = −ˆjE0 sin(ky − ωt )
3. E( y, t ) = ˆiE0 sin(ky − ωt )
E ( y , t ) = − ˆiE sin( ky − ωt )
4. 0

5. Don't Have A Clue

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