Light, radiant heat (infrared radiation), X rays, and radio waves are all exampl
ID: 2016631 • Letter: L
Question
Light, radiant heat (infrared radiation), X rays, and radio waves are all examples of traveling electromagnetic waves. Electromagnetic waves comprise combinations of electric and magnetic fields that are mutually compatible in the sense that the changes in one generate the other.
The simplest form of a traveling electromagnetic wave is a plane wave. For a wave traveling in the x direction whose electric field is in the y direction, the electric and magnetic fields are given by
ec{E} = E_0 sin(kx-omega t)hat{y},
ec{B} = B_0 sin(kx-omega t)hat{z}.
This wave is linearly polarized in the y direction.
Part A) What is the velocity of electromagnetic waves?
v= ? m/s
Part B) For an electromagnetic wave with maximum electric field of 2200 V/m, and wavelength of 477 nm, what is the k (angular wave number) and omega (angular frequency)?
k,w = ?
Part C) What is the period T of the wave described?
T= ? s
Part D) What is the maximum magnetic field for the wave described?
Bo = ? T
Part E) What is the intensity of the wave described?
I= ? W/m^2
Explanation / Answer
I want you to look at my physics school homework website, we did this problem, exactly the same: http://physics.indiana.edu/~shylee/p202/hw_10s/hw08a.pdf look for Traveling Electromagnetic Waves: by the way this was one of my favorite problem.
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