THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Physics 401
Assignment #
7:
WAVES IN MEDIA
Wed. 22 Feb. 2006 - finish by Wed. 1 Mar.
- (p. 395, Problem 9.18) - Practical Questions:1
- Suppose you embedded some free charge in a piece of glass.
About how long would it take for the charge to flow to the surface?
- Silver is an excellent conductor, but it's expensive.
Suppose you were designing a microwave experiment to operate
at a frequency of 1010 Hz.
How thick would you make the silver coatings?
- Find the wavelength and propagation speed in copper
for radio waves at 1 MHz.
Compare the corresponding values in air (or vacuum).
- (p. 396, Problem 9.19) - Skin Depth:
- Show that the skin depth in a poor conductor
(
) is
(independent of frequency).
Find the skin depth (in meters) for (pure) water.2
- Show that the skin depth in a good conductor
(
) is
(where is the wavelength in the conductor.
Find the skin depth (in nanometers) for a typical metal
[
(m)-1]
in the visible range (
s-1),
assuming
and
.
Why are metals opaque?
- Show that in a good conductor the magnetic field
lags the electric field by 45,
and find the ratio of their amplitudes.
For a numerical example, use the "typical metal"
in the previous question.
- (p. 398, Problem 9.21) - Silver Mirror:
Calculate the reflection coefficient for light at an air-to-silver
interface [
(m)-1],
at optical frequencies (
s-1).
- (p. 413, Problem 9.37) - TIR:
According to SNELL'S LAW, when light passes from
an optically dense medium into a less dense one
(n1 > n2)
the propagation vector bends away from the normal
(see Figure).
In particular, if the light is incident at the critical angle
,
then
, and the transmitted ray
just grazes the surface.
If exceeds , there is no refracted ray at all,
only a reflected one. This is the phenomenon of
total internal reflection,3
on which light pipes and fiber optics are based.
But the fields are not zero in medium 2;
what we get is a so-called evanescent wave,
which is rapidly attenuated and transports no energy
into medium 2.4
A quick way to construct the evanescent wave is simply to
quote the results of Sect. 9.3.3, with
and
;
the only change is that
is now greater than 1, and so
is imaginary. (Obviously, can no longer
be interpreted as an angle!)
- Show that
,
where
and
.
This describes a wave propagating in the x direction
(parallel to the interface!)
and attenuated in the z direction.
- Noting that
is now imaginary,
use Eqs. (9.109),
to calculate the reflection coefficient for polarization parallel to
the plane of incidence. [Notice that you get 100% reflection,
which is better than at a conducting surface (see for example
Problem 9.21).]
- Do the same for polarization perpendicular to the plane of incidence
(use the results of Problem 9.16):
- In the case of polarization perpendicular to the plane of incidence,
show that the (real) evanescent fields are
,
.
- Check that the fields in the last part
satisfy all of MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS (9.67).
- For those same fields, construct the Poynting vector
and show that, on average, no energy is transmitted
in the z direction.
Jess H. Brewer
2006-02-19