1 / 43

Electromagnetic Media and Boundary Conditions

Electromagnetic Media and Boundary Conditions. Plane waves at an interface:. k r. k t. k i. n 1. n 2. Questions. How do waves propagate across the interface? What are the directions of the reflected, refracted waves?

faith
Télécharger la présentation

Electromagnetic Media and Boundary Conditions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Electromagnetic Media and Boundary Conditions • Plane waves at an interface: kr kt ki n1 n2 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  2. Questions... • How do waves propagate across the interface? • What are the directions of the reflected, refracted waves? • How can we describe the interaction between light and matter in the materials? PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  3. Answers • Use physics (Maxwell’s Eqns) to establish boundary conditions on EM fields. • Use more physics to understand the propagation of EM waves in the presence of atoms. • Consequences for optics and image formation. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  4. Law of Reflection: Toy Version Medium 1 Medium 2 n1 n2 Light “rays” can bounce off the interface when they encounter a change in the index of refraction. This effect is greatly enhanced for polished metal surfaces – nearly all energy is reflected. “Specular Reflection.” PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  5. Transmission of waves across a Boundary: Toy Version One “wavefront” Propagation direction n1 n2 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  6. The Propagation Direction Changes!! n2 One “wavefront” Original Propagation direction New Propagation Direction n1 This one fell behind This one fell behind more PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  7. How big of a Bend? One “wavefront” n2 q2 q1 q2 n1 h q1 v1t v2t PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  8. A Little Trigonometry… PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  9. Law of Refraction (Snell’s Law) Index of refraction: n=c/v Medium 2 Medium 1 n2 n1 Light “rays” bend when they encounter a change in the index of refraction. Index of refraction of air = nearly 1.0 Index of refraction of typical glasses = 1.4-1.7 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  10. Putting it all together • Let’s say we have light with wavelength 550 nm in air (n≈1) going into glass (n=1.5). What happens? • Propagation direction: changes according to Snell’s law. • Wavelength: changes, • Velocity changes, • Frequency is unchanged. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  11. Now using Maxwell’s Equations: The “Real” Derivation Magnitude of the Wave Vector PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  12. Boundary Conditions at Interface Region 1: Region 2: Consider an arbitrary point A on the interface. On the boundary, we must have PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  13. Boundary Conditions 2 Why? Faraday’s Law: Shrink dx to 0... l l PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  14. Boundary Conditions 3 B finite everywhere implies: as l or PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  15. Okay, now with plane waves... (1) any True for all t, xA. In particular consider xA=0, Same angular frequency for all three waves. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  16. Wave Vectors Using the k2 expressions derived earlier, Magnitude of reflected and incident wave vectors is the same. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  17. Plane of Incidence Define coordinates such that xA . is the “plane of incidence” n1 n2 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  18. Vector Decomposition In general, (in plane of the interface) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  19. Wave Vectors (2) , and Eq. (1) on slide 15 Next consider any Which we can also rewrite as: (1) (2) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  20. A Little Vector Algebra... Now rewrite Eqn. 1 (slide 17) in terms of components: Can show Rewriting Eqn. 2 (also slide 17) in a similar fashion, can show Try it! PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  21. Implications Since A is arbitrary, choose , Then: are in the plane of incidence! PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  22. More Implications , Next choose Then: (slide 16) Physics: choose (Why?) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  23. Law of Reflection (slide 20) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  24. Law of Refraction (Snell’s Law) (slide 20) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  25. Conclusions • Plane waves change direction upon striking an interface in index of refraction. • In general, expect two resultant waves: reflected, transmitted (refracted). • Propagation directions of reflected, refracted waves determined by EM boundary conditions. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  26. Light and Matter Question: How does an atom interact with a plane wave of EM radiation? Objective: Want to understand how index of refraction arises. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  27. Two Interactions Non-Resonant/Elastic Scattering: no change in atomic energy levels of atom (same energy, different k).Atoms/molecules behave as oscillators, whose electron cloud can be driven into a ground-state, non-resonant vibration. Absorption: at characteristic w’s corresponding to energy differences between atomic states or resonant vibrations. • some energy transferred to other atoms (via collisions as thermal energy, aka dissipative absorption) • atom can re-radiate PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  28. x z Electric Dipoles Dipole moment p defined by ρ( x) – charge density Example: d PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  29. Oscillating Dipoles p a periodic function of time: Can show that the electric field from an oscillating dipole is given by PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  30. Oscillating Dipoles(cont.) p a periodic function of time: Hecht – fig 3.32 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  31. Spherical Waves Can show that “source” Is a solution to the wave equation in spherical coordinates. (Try it!) “Wavefronts” (surfaces of constant phase) are spherical. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  32. Dipole Radiation Equation on slide 29 is a spherical wave modulated by . Intensity/irradiance I: Inverse square law PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  33. Dipole Radiation (cont.) • The intensity/irradiance (outward from the dipole source) • Is directional (sin θ dependence) • Obeys the inverse square law (decreases as 1/r2) • Strong dependence on frequency (~ω4); the higher the frequency, the stronger the radiation) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  34. Atoms Polarize atom, let it go. We expect a restoring force (opposite charges attract): For small oscillations (like a spring). PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  35. Small Oscillations Spring force Characteristic frequency ...assuming nucleus has much more mass than electron. (Fixed nucleus, only negative charge moves.) PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  36. Plane waves drive the dipole... E(t) – electric field of the incoming electromagnetic plane wave ω – angular frequency of the e.m. plane wave (assume atom at the origin, x=0) Sum of forces = mass times acceleration Equation of motion: PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  37. Solution Claim: solution is of the form Plug into equation of motion (try!), solve for absorption PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  38. Implications (1) x, E are in phase x, E are 180 degrees out of phase PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  39. From Atoms to Macroscopic Properties Electric polarization vector P: Can show that P = dipole moment per unit volume: x = separations of dipoles N – number of dipoles per unit volume PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  40. Now relate e to w Use eq. (1) slide 38 Now, most optical materials have PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  41. Dispersion In other words, But w is related to l: So, This implies the index of refraction is dependent on l ! This phenomenon is known as dispersion. PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  42. Optical Materials Most optical materials have Molecules: many modes of oscillation, many resonances. Typical dispersion curve 2 n 1.5 l 400nm 1000nm PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

  43. Conclusions • Propagation of light through optical materials is non-resonant scattering. • Incident plane waves interact with atoms, which act as electric dipoles, which then radiate spherical waves. kt ki E.g. n>1 n=1 PHY 530 -- Lecture 02

More Related