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Lecture 2 Vector Algebra

1) Electromagnetic fields can be generated naturally through phenomena like solar radiation and lightning, or artificially through man-made devices like radio stations, cell phones, and power lines. 2) Electromagnetics is the study of electric and magnetic phenomena and finds applications in areas like wireless communications, antennas, and electric machines. 3) Some common electromagnetic devices include transformers, cell phones, transmission lines, antennas, radars, and optical fibers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views

Lecture 2 Vector Algebra

1) Electromagnetic fields can be generated naturally through phenomena like solar radiation and lightning, or artificially through man-made devices like radio stations, cell phones, and power lines. 2) Electromagnetics is the study of electric and magnetic phenomena and finds applications in areas like wireless communications, antennas, and electric machines. 3) Some common electromagnetic devices include transformers, cell phones, transmission lines, antennas, radars, and optical fibers.

Uploaded by

Fen D Yap
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Electromagnetic (EM) Fields

• EM fields generated naturally:


solar radiation, lightning
• EM fields generated by man:
radio stations, cell phones, power lines
eg.: Wireless communications : voice
and data information transmitted and
received via antennas and high-frequency
electronics, components requiring
knowledge of EM to design and understand.

1
Electromagnetics
• Electromagnetics (EM) is a branch of physics or
electrical engineering in which electric and
magnetic phenomena are studied.
• EM principles find applications in many
disciplines such as microwaves, antennas,
satellite communications, electric machines,
bioelectromagnetics, plasmas, nuclear research,
and etc.

2
EM Devices
• Transformers
• Cell phones
• Transmission Lines
• Antenna
• Radar
• Radio/TV

• Electric motors

• Waveguide
• Optical fibers
3
• Laser
In Electromagnetics, you’re
working on:
• D = electric flux density
• B = magnetic flux density
• E = electric field intensity
• H = magnetic field intensity
• ρv = volume charge density
• J = current density

These are macroscopic physical quantities!!!

4
History
• 1835 Carl Friedrich Gauss (German) relates the
electric flux flowing through an enclosed
surface to the enclosed electric charge.
• 1831 Michael Faraday (English) discovers that
charging magnetic flux can induce an
electromotive force.
• 1820 Andre-Marie Ampere (French) notes that
parallel currents in wires attract each other
and opposite currents repel.

5
Maxwell’s Equations For Static EM Fields
• The subject of electromagnetic phenomena can
be summarized in four simple equations, the
Maxwell’s equations.
(Vector Analysis) (Vector Analysis)
Curl Divergence

6
Field Representation
• The electric and magnetic fields have both the
magnitude and direction. They are vectors!
E H

Measured from
Measured from
a point in
a point in
space
• Vector Analysis is a mathematical tool with
space

which EM concepts (fields) are most


conveniently expressed and best comprehend.

7
CHAPTER 1

VECTOR ALGEBRA

8
Vector Analysis
We will go thru the following topics:
• Scalars and Vectors
• Scalar and Vector Fields
• Unit Vector
• Vector in Cartesian Coordinates
• Vector Addition and Subtraction
• Position and Distance Vectors
• Vector Multiplication
• Vector Components
9
Scalars and Vectors
• Scalar - magnitude
– Examples: time, mass, distance,
temperature, electric potential

• Vector - both magnitude and direction


– Examples: velocity, force, displacement,
electric field intensity

10
Field
• Field = a function that specifies a particular
quantity everywhere in a region.
• Quantity : Scalar / Vector
– Scalar fields : Temperature distribution, sound
intensity in a theater, electric potential in a region,
refractive index
– Vector fields : Gravitational force, velocity of
raindrops

11
Unit Vector
aA A vector in space can
A be simply defined as:

A=AaA

• A unit vector aA along A is defined as a vector whose


magnitude is unity and its direction is along A.
• A vector A = AaA
• For a unit vector:

12
Vector Representation
z
aA az aA
A
A
ay
y
ax

x
However, it is more scientific to represent
a vector by placing it in a coordinate system:
A = AaA= Axax + Ayay + Azaz
13
Vector Representation in Cartesian
Coordinates
• In Cartesian coordinates
– Vector A may be represented as
A (Ax, Ay, Az) or A = Axax + Ayay + Azaz
where Ax, Ay and Az are the components of
A in the x, y and z directions; ax, ay, and
az are unit vectors in the x, y, and z
directions.
14
A (Ax, Ay, Az), A = Axax + Ayay + Azaz

• Magnitude of vector A

z
z
A
az ay Azaz
ax Axax
y y
Ayay
x x
UEEA2263 Introductory Electromagnetics 15
aA : Unit vector along A
• For vector A (Ax, Ay, Az), the unit vector
along A is

16
Vector Addition and Subtraction
• Two vectors A and B can be added
together to give another vector C:
C=A+B
• Given
A = (Ax, Ay, Az) and B = (Bx, By, Bz)
then
C = (Ax+Bx) ax + (Ay+By) ay + (Az+Bz) az
17
Vector Addition C = A + B
• Parallelogram rule: • Head-to-tail rule:

C B
A
A
C

18
Vector Subtraction D = A - B
• Given
A = (Ax, Ay, Az) and B = (Bx, By, Bz)
then
D = A – B = A + (-B)
= (Ax- Bx)ax + (Ay- By)ay + (Az- Bz)az

19
Vector Subtraction D = A - B
• Parallelogram rule: • Head-to-tail rule:
-B
D
A
D A
-B B

20
Laws for Addition (Subtraction)
• Three basic laws of algebra obeyed by any
given vectors A, B, and C are summarized as:
Law Addition
Commutative A+B= B+A
Associative A + (B + C) = (A + B) + C
Distributive k(A + B) = kA + kB
where k is a scalar

21
Laws for Multiplication
• Multiplication of vector with a scalar

Law Multiplication
Commutative kA = Ak
Associative k(lA) = (kl)A
where k and l is a scalar

22

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