THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Physics 401
Assignment #
12:
RADIATION 2
Wed. 29 Mar. 2006 - finish by Wed. 5 Apr.
- (p. 450, Problem 11.3) -
Radiation Resistance of a Cell Phone:
Find the radiation resistance of the wire joining the two ends
of the oscillating electric dipole described in Section 11.1.2.
(This is the resistance that would give the same average power loss -
to heat - as the oscillating dipole in fact puts out
in the form of radiation.)
Show that
, where
is the wavelength of the radiation.
For the wires in an ordinary cell phone (say, d=5 cm),
should you worry about the radiation contribution
to the total resistance? Does it matter whether your
cell phone uses the 900 MHz band or the 1.9 GHz band?1
- (p. 454, Problem 11.6) -
Radiation Resistance of a Magnetic Dipole Antenna:
Find the radiation resistance for the oscillating magnetic dipole
shown in Fig. 11.8. Express your answer in terms of
and b, and compare the radiation resistance of the electric
dipole.2
- (p. 464, Problem 11.13) -
Nonrelativistic Bremsstrahlung Radiation:
- Suppose an electron decelerates at a constant rate a
from some initial velocity v0 down to zero.
What fraction of its initial kinetic energy is lost to EM radiation?
(The rest is absorbed by whatever mechanism
keeps the acceleration constant.) Assume
(nonrelativistic case) so that the Larmor formula can be used.3
- To get a sense of the numbers involved,
suppose the initial velocity is thermal4 (around 105 m/s)
and the distance over which the electron decelerates to rest is 30 Å.
What can you conclude about radiation losses for electrons
in an ordinary conductor?
- Half-Wave Antenna:
Consider a half-wave linear antenna of length ,
with current
,
where .
- Show that the linear charge density is
,
(i.e. the charge density is maximum at the times when
the current is zero.)
- If an FM radio station broadcasts at a frequency of 10 MHz
with a power of 10 kW from a half-wave antenna,
how long must the antenna be? What is the current?
Jess H. Brewer
2006-03-23