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What is the ratio between amplitude of electric and magnetic field in electromagnetic waves?Is it a constant? does it depend on the medium? does it depend on the frequency?Is it possible to generate pure electric wave or magnetic wave?
B=E/cthe magnetic field is numerically much smaller than the electric field, although they both carry the same energyYou can have a time varying electric field or magnetic field but remember each produces the other so if you vary them the electric field will create an EM wave.
Quote from: Colin2B on 28/02/2018 18:38:03B=E/cthe magnetic field is numerically much smaller than the electric field, although they both carry the same energyYou can have a time varying electric field or magnetic field but remember each produces the other so if you vary them the electric field will create an EM wave.Are the electric and magnetic components of the wave so produced of equal amplitude and frequency? (no matter what the strengths of the respective fields)
does it depend on the medium? does it depend on the frequency?
Sorry, i don’t really understand the question.E and B are the electric field strength and magnetic field strength components of the wave - remember what we said in the other thread about a field being a set of measurements at points in space and time. No, they are not of equal ‘amplitude’ they are related as B=E/c.
Do I have it right that the em wave has no need of the E or B fields to propagate once it has been created?
As @syhprum points out, you will have real problems with this idea.The E and B fields are the wave components at any point in space/time, they are inseperable from the wave.
What is the ratio between amplitude of electric and magnetic field in electromagnetic waves?
Is it a constant? does it depend on the medium? does it depend on the frequency?Is it possible to generate pure electric wave or magnetic wave?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/02/2018 12:25:25What is the ratio between amplitude of electric and magnetic field in electromagnetic waves?Is it a constant? does it depend on the medium? does it depend on the frequency?Is it possible to generate pure electric wave or magnetic wave?It's a great question. Can you offer some background ideas to your question, as for instance why you would ask this, as of course we can't assume anything in physics? You're essentially asking what divines a magnetic field in proportion with an electric field, why it is so. Some argue a field has no source. Granted. Complicated post that was. So what divines an e/m field as it is? A resolved feature of the big bang? Why the question.......don't you know better not to ask these questions (just kidding).....?
Your formula seems to imply that the ratio is a constant. Can you provide the source of the formula above?
So the original field does not weaken(it disappears once the wave is created?)
rotation of the Earth as the magnet pole does not coincide with the axis of rotation
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/02/2018 12:25:25What is the ratio between amplitude of electric and magnetic field in electromagnetic waves? In which unit of measure? In SI is c, as already said: ||E|| = c||B||; in other systems, the rate may not be c; in CGS - GAUSS the rate is 1: ||E|| = ||B||.And this in the "far field" of the wave, that is far enough from the sources, or things become very complicated--lightarrow
Quote from: lightarrow on 01/03/2018 00:55:04Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/02/2018 12:25:25What is the ratio between amplitude of electric and magnetic field in electromagnetic waves? In which unit of measure? In SI is c, as already said: ||E|| = c||B||; in other systems, the rate may not be c; in CGS - GAUSS the rate is 1: ||E|| = ||B||.And this in the "far field" of the wave, that is far enough from the sources, or things become very complicated--lightarrow How can merely change the unit from SI to cgs
In the case of slowly rotating magnet, we can get amplitude of B much larger than amplitude of E when measured nearby.
But if we measure from adequately far distance, amplitude of B diminish quicker than E until their ratio approach a constant?