Title: Wave Incidence [Chapter 10 cont, Sadiku]
1Wave IncidenceChapter 10 cont, Sadiku
- Dr. Sandra Cruz-Pol
- Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept.
- UPR-Mayagüez
2Ex. Light traveling in air encounters the water
another medium.
3Wave incidence
- For many applications, such as fiber optics,
line power transmission, its necessary to know
what happens to a wave when it meets a different
medium. -
- How much is transmitted?
- How much is reflected back?
4We will look at
- Normal incidence
- Wave arrives at 0o from normal
- Standing waves
- Oblique incidence
- Wave arrives at another angle
- Snells Law and Critical angle
- Parallel or Perpendicular
- Brewster angle
5Reflection at Normal Incidence
x
z
y
z0
Medium 2
Medium 1
6Now in terms of equations
7Reflected wave
- Its traveling along z axis
8Transmitted wave
9The total fields
- At medium 1 and medium 2
- Tangential components must be continuous at the
interface
10Define
- Reflection coefficient, G
- Transmission coefficient, t
- Note
- 1 G t
- Both are dimensionless and may be complex
- 0G1
11PE 10.8
- A 5GHz uniform plane wave Eis 10e-jbz ax in free
space is incident normally on a large plane,
lossless dielectric slab (zgt0) having e 4eo and
mmo. - Find
- the reflected wave Ers and
- the transmitted wave Ets.
Answer -3.33 ejb1z x V/m, 6.67 e-jb2z x V/m
where b2 2b1 200 p/3
SEE http//www.acs.psu.edu/drussell/Demos/reflect/
reflect.html
12Case 1
- Medium 1 perfect dielectric, s10
- Medium 2 perfect conductor, s28
- Halla impedancias intrínseca.
- Reflección,
- Transmisión
- y campos
- http//www.phy.ntnu.edu.tw/java/waveSuperposition/
waveSuperposition.html
13The EM field forms aStanding Wave on medium 1
E1
2Eio
z
Conducting material
14Standing Wave Applets
- http//www.phy.ntnu.edu.tw/java/waveSuperposition/
waveSuperposition.html - http//www.ngsir.netfirms.com/englishhtm/StatWave.
htm - http//www.physics.smu.edu/olness/www/03fall1320/
applet/pipe-waves.html - http//www.walter-fendt.de/ph14e/stwaverefl.htm
15Case 2
- Medium 1 perfect dielectric s10
- Medium 2 perfect dielectric s20
16Standing waves due to reflection
E1
Lossless Medium 1
Eio (1G)
z
0
Lossless Medium 2
At every half-wavelength, everything repeats!
17Case 3
- Medium 1 perfect dielectric s10
- Medium 2 perfect dielectric s20
18Standing waves due to reflection
E1
Lossless Medium 1
Eio (1G)
Eio (1-G)
z
0
Lossless Medium 2
At every half-wavelength, all em properties repeat
19Standing Wave Ratio, s
- Measures the amount of reflections, the more
reflections, the larger the standing wave that is
formed. - The ratio of E1max to E1min
- or
Ideally s1 (0 dB) No reflections
20PE 10.9
- The plane wave E50 sin (wt 5x) ay V/m in a
lossless medium (m4mo, eeo) encounters a lossy
medium (mmo, e4eo, s0.1 mhos/m) normal to the
x-axis at x0. Find - G
- t
- s
- Er
- Et
- http//www.walter-fendt.de/ph14e/stwaverefl.htm
?Answers 0.8186
exp(j171o) 0.23 exp(j33.56o) 10.03 40.93 sin
(wt 5x 171o) y 11.5 e -6.02x sin (wt - 7.83x
33.6o) y V/m
21Ex. Antenna Radome
- A 10GHz aircraft radar uses a narrow-beam
scanning antenna mounted on a gimbal behind a
dielectric radome. - Even though the radome shape is far from planar,
it is approximately planar over the narrow extent
of the radar beam. - If the radome material is a lossless dielectric
with mr1 and er9, choose its thickness d such
that the radome appears transparent to the radar
beam. - Mechanical integrity requires d to be greater
that 2.3 cm.
Antenna with radome
Antenna with no radome
Answer l/2.5cm, d2.5cm
22Power Flow in Medium 1
- The net average power density flowing in medium 1
23Power Flow in Transmitted wave
- The net average power density flowing in medium 2
24Power in Lossy Media
25We will look at
- Normal incidence
- Wave arrives at 90o from the surface
- Standing waves
- Oblique incidence (lossless)
- Wave arrives at an angle
- Snells Law and Critical angle
- Parallel or Perpendicular
- Brewster angle