Electromagnetic Field and Waves: EE 221 Spring 2004
Electromagnetic Field and Waves: EE 221 Spring 2004
Course Outline
This course is designed to serve as the first course in electromagnetics to fulfill the requirements of the electrical engineering and computer engineering core curricula. It covers
Vectors and field concepts EM fields and materials Maxwell's equations, vector calculus and potential functions Energy storage, static and quasistatic fields Time-domain analysis of waves EM simulations using MATLAB
Assessment
Final Exam: Mid term: Quiz: Lab: 40% 30% 20% 10%
There will be in total three quiz tests out of which two best will be considered.
Resources
The Textbook: David K. Cheng, Field and wave Electromagnetics, 2nd Edition, Addison-Wesley publishing company. Reference Texts: William H. Hayt, JR, Engineering Electromagnetics, 5th edition, McGraw-Hill edition.
Plan
What is electromagnetics ?
Definition
Radar
Computed surface currents on prototype military aircraft at 100Mhz The plane wave is incident from left to right at nose on incidence. The currents re-radiate back to the source radar (and so can be detected)
EMP
Microwave pulse penetrating a missile radome containing a horn antenna. Wave is from right to left at 15 from boresight.
Reality
Illustration of coupling & cross talk of a high-speed logic pulse entering and leaving a microchip embedded within a conventional dual-in line integrated circuit package.
note how the fields associated with the pulse are not confined to the metal circuit but spread out and couple to adjacent circuit paths.
Wireless Communications
The direction of the field is the direction of the arrows (ie a vector). The strength of the field is proportional to the spacing of the arrows (not the length).
A non-uniform field
Electric field intensity Electric flux density Magnetic flux density Magnetic field intensity
E D B H
Magnetic