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EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

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EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE
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Page 1: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

EM THEORY

Amrutha HarichandranAssistant Professor

ECE Dept., ASE

Page 2: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Area of interest

• EM Theory and related subject–Difficulties

Page 3: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

WAVES:

• Transfer energy from one place to another

Mechanical ElectromagneticRequire a medium Not Require a medium

Eg: Water and sound waves

• Speed of electromagnetic waves = 300,000,000 m/s

• 8 minutes to move from the sun to earth 150 million miles

Page 4: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• When an electric field changes, so does the magnetic field. The changing magnetic field causes the electric field to change. When one field vibrates—so does the other.

• electromagnetic wave.

Page 5: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Importance of EM Waves

• Each wavelength of electro-magnetic radiation (light) brings us unique information

• Almost everything we know about the Universe comes from the study of the electromagnetic radiation emitted or reflected by objects in space

• Objects in space send out electromagnetic radiation at all wavelengths - from gamma rays to radio waves.

Page 6: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Electromagnetic Spectrum• EM waves when placed in order of increasing frequency• Band width and frequency

Page 7: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

RADIO WAVES• Longest wavelengths and lowest frequencies

• A radio picks up radio waves through an antenna and converts it to sound waves

• Each radio station in an area broadcasts at a different frequency

Page 8: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

MICROWAVES– Used in microwave ovens.• Waves transfer energy to the water in the food causing

them to vibrate which in turn transfers energy in the form of heat to the food

– Used by cell phones and pagers

– RADAR (Radio Detection and Ranging)• Used to find the speed of an object by sending out radio

waves and measuring the time it takes them to return.

Page 9: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

INFRARED RAYS• Infrared= below red• Shorter wavelength and higher frequency than

microwaves.• You can feel the longest ones as warmth on your skin• Heat lamps give off infrared waves.• Warm objects give off more heat energy than cool

objects.• Thermogram—a picture that shows regions of different

temperatures in the body. Temperatures are calculated by the amount of infrared radiation given off. Therefore people give off infrared rays.

Page 11: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

VISIBLE LIGHT• Shorter wavelength and higher frequency than

infrared rays.• Electromagnetic waves we can see.• Longest wavelength= red light• Shortest wavelength= violet (purple) light• When light enters a new medium it bends

(refracts). Each wavelength bends a different amount allowing white light to separate into it’s various colors ROYGBIV.

Page 12: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 13: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 14: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS• Shorter wavelength and higher frequency than

visible light• Carry more energy than visible light• Used to kill bacteria. (Sterilization of equipment)• Causes your skin to produce vitamin D (good for

teeth and bones)• Used to treat jaundice ( in some new born babies.• Too much can cause skin cancer. • Use sun block to protect against (UV rays)

Page 15: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

X- RAYS• Shorter wavelength and higher frequency than UV-rays• Carry a great amount of energy• Can penetrate most matter.• Bones and teeth absorb x-rays. (The light part of an x-ray

image indicates a place where the x-ray was absorbed)• Too much exposure can cause cancer

• Used by engineers to check for tiny cracks in structures.

Page 16: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

GAMMA RAYS

• Shorter wavelength and higher frequency than X-rays

• Carry the greatest amount of energy and penetrate the most.

• Used in radiation treatment to kill cancer cells.• Can be very harmful if not used correctly.

Page 17: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Using the EM waves to view the Sun• At different wavelengths

Page 18: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 19: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 20: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Brief SUMMARY• All electromagnetic waves travel at the same

speed. (300,000,000 meters/second in a vacuum.

• They all have different wavelength and different frequencies.– Long wavelength-lowest frequency– Short wavelength highest frequency– The higher the frequency the higher the energy.

Page 21: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Electromagnetic Spectrum Quiz

• Which of the following is correct in order of lowest to highest frequency? [A] X-rays, Visible Light, Microwave[B] Ultraviolet, Visible Light, Gamma-rays[C] Microwave, Visible Light, Gamma-rays

Answer: C

Page 22: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Gas in space emits radio waves. [A] True[B] False

Answer: A

Page 23: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• This type of emission can come from radioactive materials. [A] Radio[B] X-rays[C] Gamma-rays

Answer: C

Page 24: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Applications of EM Waves

• Transmission Lines• High frequency circuits• Satellite Communication• Antenna• Fiber Optic Communication• Mobile Communication• EMI and EMC

Page 25: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Transmission Lines– Carry EM energy– Eg: Coaxial cable– Low frequency and high frequency

LOW Freq HIGH Freq

. Discrete Components-RLC

.Physical size has no effect

.KVL KCL

.V and I

. Distributed

.Length of the connecting wire

.Maxwell

.Waves

Page 26: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• High frequency circuits– Discontinuity in ckt path – Radiation– Computer

• Satellite Communication– C band (6/4 GHz)– Remote sensing

• Antenna

• EMI/EMC– Tempest

Page 27: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Transmission Media • Twisted Pair– Low Data Rate– Telephone lines-avoid common interference

• Coaxial Cable– Few Mbps– LAN

• Wave Guide– High frequency– Center conductor loss- Skin effect

Page 28: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 29: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 30: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.
Page 31: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Q.1

• A plane wave propagating in a lossless dielectric medium has n electric field given as E= 10 cos(1.5x 1010 t- 61.6 z). Determine the wavelength , phase velocity and wave impedance for this wave and the dielectric constant of the medium.

Page 32: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• E=E0 cos(wt-kz)• Angular velocity

w=• Wavenumber / Phase constant

k=

Page 33: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• E=E0 cos(wt-kz)

• Angular velocity w=1.5x 1010 rad/sec

• Wavenumber / Phase constant k= 61.6 m-1

Page 34: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Wave length λ = 2π/k

• Phase Velocity Vp= w/k • εr = (c/ Vp )2

• η= η0 / √εr

Page 35: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Wave length λ = 2π/k =0.102 m• Phase Velocity Vp= w/k = 2.45 x 108

m/sec • εr = (c/ Vp )2= 1.5

• η= η0 / √εr = 307.8 Ω

Page 36: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Q. 2

• A plane wave incident on a medium having εr = 9 and incident power is 45 w/m2.Find reflection coefficient reflected power and power transmitted through the medium?

Page 37: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Reflection coefficient, R= (1- √εr )/(1+ √εr )

• Reflected Power=lRl2 x Incident Power• Transmitted Power= (1-lRl2 )x Incident

Power

Page 38: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Q. 3

• A radio transmitter is connected to an antenna having an impedance 80+j40 Ω with a 50 Ω coaxial cable. If the 50 Ω transmitter can deliver 30 W when connected to a 50 Ω load, how much power is delivered to the antenna.

Page 39: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• R= (Zl - Zo)/ (Zl +Zo)

• PLoad =PIncident – Preflected

Pload = (1-lRl2 )x PIncident

Page 40: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• R= (Zl - Zo)/ (Zl +Zo) = 0.367<360

• PLoad =PIncident – Preflected

Pload = (1-lRl2 )x PIncident =25.9 W

Page 41: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

Q. 4

• A transmission line has the following per unit length parameters: L=0.2 µ H/m, C= 300 pF/m, R= 5 Ω/m and G=0.01 S/m. Calculate the propagation constant and characteristic impedance of this line at 500 MHz. Recalculate these quantities in the absence of loss

Page 42: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Propagation Constant r = √((R+jwL)(G+jwC)) = α + j β

• Zo = √((R+jwL)/(G+jwC)) • Absence of loss (R=G=0) – α=0– r =w √(LC)– Zo = √(L/C)

Page 43: EM THEORY Amrutha Harichandran Assistant Professor ECE Dept., ASE.

• Propagation Constant r = √((R+jwL)(G+jwC)) = α + j β=0.23+j24.3 rad/m

• Zo = √((R+jwL)/(G+jwC)) = 25.8+j 0.03 Ω• Absence of loss (R=G=0) – α=0– r =w √(LC)=24.3 rad/m– Zo = √(L/C)=25.8 Ω


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