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LECTURE NO: 01 INTRODUCTION In this set of approximately 49 lectures covering a course of one semester, I would take you through electrostatics, magneto statics and electromagnetic phenomena, leading to both the differential and integral form of the Maxwell’s equations. At the end of the course you would have an appreciation of what are the important phenomena and problems associated with electromagnetism. However, the course requires a good understanding of the subject of vector calculus. So in the initial lectures, we would spend some time in revising or providing an introduction to the essentials of vector calculus. It is not going to be rigorous the way a mathematician would like it to be but should adequately serve our purpose. In the first module, we will discuss vector calculus and some of its basic applications. We will have discussions on the concept of a scalar field and a vector field, ordinary derivatives and gradient of a scalar function, line and surface integrals, divergence and curl of a vector field, Laplacian. We will enunciate two major theorems, viz., the divergence theorem and the Stoke’s theorem. Concept of a Field: By field, we basically mean something that is associated with a region of space. For instance, this room in which I am speaking can be considered to be a region in which a temperature field exists. Normally, we talk of the temperature of a room. However, this is in the sense of an average and does not provide detailed temperature profile inside the room. However, the temperature inside a room does vary from place to place. For instance, if you are in a kitchen, the temperature would be higher when you are close to stove and would be lower elsewhere. In principle, one can associate a temperature with every point inside the room. The field that we talked of here, viz. the temperature field is a scalar field because the field quantity “temperature” is a scalar. The “field” is thus a region of space where with every point we can associate a scalar or a vector (it could be more generalized but for our purposes, these two will do). Coming to a vector field, as we know, a vector quantity has both magnitude and direction. Consider our room again. We can associate a gravitational field with it. Though we generally say that the acceleration due to gravity has a constant value inside the room, it is also meant in an average sense. In reality, its value and direction differs from place to place and a mass inside a room experiences a different force (both in magnitude and direction) depending on where in the room it is placed. If we talk of associating a force with every point in a certain region of space, we are talking about a vector field. In 2 dimensions, the force is a function of positions x and y and in three dimensions it is a function of x, y and z. Other than gravitational field, examples of vector fields are electric field and magnetic field. Text Book: 1. Matthew N. O. th Sadiku, Principles of Electromagnetics, 4 Ed., Oxford Intl. Student Edition. Reference Book: 1. C. R. Paul, K. W. Whites, S. A. Nasor, Introduction to Fig : Illustration of a Cartesian coordinate plane. rd Electromagnetic Fields, 3 ,TMH. th 2. Electromagnetic Field Theory, W.H. Hyat, TMH, 7 Ed. 3. Engineering Electromagnetics by Shen, Kong, Patnaik, CENGAGE Learning. LECTURE NO: 02 CARTESIAN COORDINATE SYSTEM A Cartesian coordinate system is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely in a plane by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances from the point to two fixed perpendicular directed lines, measured in the same unit of length. Each reference line is called a coordinate axis or just axis of the system, and the point where they meet is its origin, usually at ordered pair (0, 0). The coordinates can also be defined as the positions of the perpendicular projections of the point onto the two axes, expressed as signed distances from the origin Four points are marked and labeled with their coordinates: (2,3) in green, (−3,1) in red, (−1.5,−2.5) in blue, and the origin (0,0) in purple. One can use the same principle to specify the position of any point in three-dimensional space by three Cartesian coordinates, its signed distances to three mutually perpendicular planes (or, equivalently, by its perpendicular projection onto three mutually perpendicular lines). In general, n Cartesian coordinates (an element of real n-space) specify the point in an n-dimensional Euclidean space for any dimension n. These coordinates are equal, up to sign, to distances from the point to n mutually perpendicular hyperplanes. Cartesian coordinate system with a circle of radius 2 centered at the origin marked in red. The equation of a circle is (x − a)2 + (y − b)2 = r2 where a and b are the coordinates of the center (a, b) and r is the radius. One dimension Choosing a Cartesian coordinate system for a one-dimensional space that is, for a straight line involves choosing a point O of the line (the origin), a unit of length, and an orientation for the line. An orientation chooses which of the two half-lines determined by O is the positive, and which is negative; we then say that the line "is oriented" (or "points") from the negative half towards the positive half. Then each point P of the line can be specified by its distance from O, taken with a + or − sign depending on which half-line contains P. A line with a chosen Cartesian system is called a number line. Every real number has a unique location on the line. Conversely, every point on the line can be interpreted as a number in an ordered continuum such as the real numbers. The choices of letters come from the original convention, which is to use the latter part of the alphabet to indicate unknown values. The first part of the alphabet was used to designate known values. In the Cartesian plane, reference is sometimes made to a unit circle or a unit hyperbola. Three dimensions Two dimensions The modern Cartesian coordinate system in two dimensions (also called a rectangular coordinate system) is defined by an ordered pair of perpendicular lines (axes), a single unit of length for both axes, and an orientation for each axis. (Early systems allowed "oblique" axes, that is, axes that did not meet at right angles.) The lines are commonly referred to as the xand y-axes where the x-axis is taken to be horizontal and the yaxis is taken to be vertical. The point where the axes meet is taken as the origin for both, thus turning each axis into a number line. For a given point P, a line is drawn through P perpendicular to the x-axis to meet it at X and second line is drawn through P perpendicular to the y-axis to meet it at Y. The coordinates of P are then X and Y interpreted as numbers x and y on the correspondingnumber lines. The coordinates are written as an ordered pair (x, y). The point where the axes meet is the common origin of the two number lines and is simply called the origin. It is often labeled O and if so then the axes are called Ox and Oy. A plane with xand y-axes defined is often referred to as the Cartesian plane or xy plane. The value of x is called the x-coordinate or abscissa and the value of y is called the y-coordinate or ordinate. A three dimensional Cartesian coordinate system, with origin O and axis lines X, Y and Z, oriented as shown by the arrows. The tick marks on the axes are one length unit apart. The black dot shows the point with coordinates x = 2, y = 3, and z = 4, or (2,3,4). Choosing a Cartesian coordinate system for a threedimensional space means choosing an ordered triplet of lines (axes) that are pair-wise perpendicular, have a single unit of length for all three axes and have an orientation for each axis. As in the two-dimensional case, each axis becomes a number line. The coordinates of a point P are obtained by drawing a line through P perpendicular to each coordinate axis, and reading the points where these lines meet the axes as three numbers of these number lines. Alternatively, the coordinates of a point P can also be taken as the (signed) distances from P to the three planes defined by the three axes. If the axes are named x, y, and z, then the xcoordinate is the distance from the plane defined by the y and z axes. The distance is to be taken with the + or − sign, depending on which of the two half-spaces separated by that plane contains P. The y and z coordinates can be obtained in the same way from the x–z and x–y planes respectively. Fig :The four quadrants of a Cartesian coordinate system. The coordinate surfaces of the Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z). The z-axis is vertical and the x-axis is highlighted in green. Thus, the red plane shows the points with x = 1, the blue plane shows the points with z = 1, and the yellow plane shows the points with y = −1. The three surfaces intersect at the point P (shown as a black sphere) with the Cartesian coordinates (1, −1, 1). Quadrants and octants Main articles: Octant (solid geometry) and Quadrant (plane geometry) The axes of a two-dimensional Cartesian system divide the plane into four infinite regions, called quadrants, each bounded by two half-axes. These are often numbered from 1st to 4th and denoted by Roman numerals: I (where the signs of the two coordinates are +,+), II (−,+), III (−,−), and IV (+,−). When the axes are drawn according to the mathematical custom, the numbering goes counter-clockwise starting from the upper right ("north-east") quadrant. Similarly, a three-dimensional Cartesian system defines a division of space into eight regions or octants, according to the signs of the coordinates of the points. The convention used for naming a specific octant is to list its signs, e.g. (+ + +) or (− + −). The generalization of the quadrant and octant to arbitrary number of dimensions is the orthant, and a similar naming system applies. Cartesian formulas for the plane Distance between two points The Euclidean distance between two points of the plane with Cartesian coordinates and is Rotation To rotate a figure counterclockwise around the origin by some angle is equivalent to replacing every point with coordinates (x,y) by the point with coordinates (x',y'), where This is the Cartesian version of Pythagoras's theorem. In threedimensional space, the distance between points and is Thus: which can be obtained by two consecutive applications of Pythagoras' theorem. Thus: General matrix form of the transformations Euclidean transformations These Euclidean transformations of the plane can all be described in a uniform way by using matrices. The result of applying a Euclidean transformation to a point The Euclidean transformations or Euclidean motions are the (bijective) mappings of points of the Euclidean plane to themselves which preserve distances between points. There are four types of these mappings (also called isometries): translations, rotations, reflections and glide reflections. Translation Translating a set of points of the plane, preserving the distances and directions between them, is equivalent to adding a fixed pair of numbers (a, b) to the Cartesian coordinates of every point in the set. That is, if the original coordinates of a point are (x, y), after the translation they will be is given by the formula where A is a 2×2 orthogonal matrix and b = (b1, b2) is an arbitrary ordered pair of numbers;[6] that is, where [Note the use of row vectors for point coordinates and that the matrix is written on the right.] To be orthogonal, the matrix A must have orthogonal rows with same Euclidean length of one, that is, A11A21+A12A22=0 And A211+A212=A221+A222=1 This is equivalent to saying that A times its transpose must be the identity matrix. If these conditions do not hold, the formula describes a more general affine transformation of the plane provided that the determinant of A is not zero. The formula defines a translation if and only if A is the identity matrix. The transformation is a rotation around some point if and only if A is a rotation matrix, meaning that A11A22- A21A12=1 A reflection or glide reflection is obtained when, A11A22- A21A12=-1 Assuming that translation is not used transformations can be combined by simply multiplying the associated transformation matrices. In two dimensions Fig :The right hand rule. Fixing or choosing the x-axis determines the y-axis up to direction. Namely, the y-axis is necessarily the perpendicular to the x-axis through the point marked 0 on the x-axis. But there is a choice of which of the two half lines on the perpendicular to designate as positive and which as negative. Each of these two choices determines a different orientation (also called handedness) of the Cartesian plane. The usual way of orienting the axes, with the positive x-axis pointing right and the positive y-axis pointing up (and the xaxis being the "first" and the y-axis the "second" axis) is considered the positive or standard orientation, also called the right-handed orientation. A commonly used mnemonic for defining the positive orientation is the right hand rule. Placing a somewhat closed right hand on the plane with the thumb pointing up, the fingers point from the x-axis to the y-axis, in a positively oriented coordinate system. The other way of orienting the axes is following the left hand rule, placing the left hand on the plane with the thumb pointing up. Fig :3D Cartesian Coordinate Handedness When pointing the thumb away from the origin along an axis towards positive, the curvature of the fingers indicates a positive rotation along that axis. Switching any two axes will reverse the orientation, but switching both will leave the orientation unchanged. In three dimensions Fig. 5: The left-handed orientation is shown on the left, and the right-handed on the right. Fig.: The right-handed Cartesian coordinate system indicating the coordinate planes. Once the x- and y-axes are specified, they determine the line along which the z-axis should lie, but there are two possible directions on this line. The two possible coordinate systems which result are called 'right-handed' and 'left-handed'. The standard orientation, where the xy-plane is horizontal and the z-axis points up (and the x- and the y-axis form a positively oriented two-dimensional coordinate system in the xy-plane if observed from above the xy-plane) is called right-handed or positive. The name derives from the right-hand rule. If the index finger of the right hand is pointed forward, the middle finger bent inward at a right angle to it, and the thumb placed at a right angle to both, the three fingers indicate the relative directions of the x-, y-, and z-axes in a right-handed system. The thumb indicates the x-axis, the index finger the y-axis and the middle finger the z-axis. Conversely, if the same is done with the left hand, a left-handed system results. Representing a vector in the standard basis A point in space in a Cartesian coordinate system may also be represented by a position vector, which can be thought of as an arrow pointing from the origin of the coordinate system to the point. If the coordinates represent spatial positions (displacements), it is common to represent the vector from the origin to the point of interest as . In two dimensions, the vector from the origin to the point with Cartesian coordinates (x, y) can be written as: r xi y j 1 0 i and j 0 1 where, iand j are unit vectors in the direction of the x-axis and y-axis respectively, generally referred to as the standard basis (in some application areas these may also be referred to as versors). Similarly, in three dimensions, the vector from the origin to the point with Cartesian coordinates (x,y,z)can be written as: 0 r xi y j z k where k 0 is the unit vector in the 1 direction of the z-axis. There is no natural interpretation of multiplying vectors to obtain another vector that works in all dimensions, however there is a way to use complex numbers to provide such a multiplication. In a two dimensional cartesian plane, identify the point with coordinates (x, y) with the complex number z = x + iy. Here, i is the imaginary unit and is identified with the point with coordinates (0, 1), so it is not the unit vector in the direction of the x-axis. Since the complex numbers can be multiplied giving another complex number, this identification provides a means to "multiply" vectors. In a three dimensional cartesian space a similar identification can be made with a subset of the quaternions. LECTURE NO.03 CYLINDRICAL COORDINATE SYSTEM A cylindrical coordinate system is a three-dimensional coordinate system that specifies point positions by the distance from a chosen reference axis, the direction from the axis relative to a chosen reference direction, and the distance from a chosen reference plane perpendicular to the axis. The latter distance is given as a positive or negative number depending on which side of the reference plane faces the point. The axis is variously called the cylindrical or longitudinal axis, to differentiate it from the polar axis, which is the ray that lies in the reference plane, starting at the origin and pointing in the reference direction. The distance from the axis may be called the radial distance or radius, while the angular coordinate is sometimes referred to as the angular position or as the azimuth. The radius and the azimuth are together called the polar coordinates, as they correspond to a two-dimensional polar coordinate system in the plane through the point, parallel to the reference plane. The third coordinate may be called the height or altitude (if the reference plane is considered horizontal), longitudinal position, or axial position. Cylindrical coordinates are useful in connection with objects and phenomena that have some rotational symmetry about the longitudinal axis, such as water flow in a straight pipe with round cross-section, heat distribution in a metal cylinder, electromagnetic fields produced by an electric current in a long, straight wire, and so on. Definition The three coordinates (ρ, φ, z) of a point P are defined as: A cylindrical coordinate system with origin O, polar axis A, and longitudinal axis L. The dot is the point with radial distance ρ = 4, angular coordinate φ = 130°, and height z = 4. The origin of the system is the point where all three coordinates can be given as zero. This is the intersection between the reference plane and the axis. The radial distance ρ is the Euclidean distance from the z axis to the point P. The azimuth φ is the angle between the reference direction on the chosen plane and the line from the origin to the projection of P on the plane. The height z is the signed distance from the chosen plane to the point P. Unique cylindrical coordinates As in polar coordinates, the same point with cylindrical coordinates (ρ, φ, z) has infinitely many equivalent coordinates, namely (ρ, φ ± n×360°, z) and (−ρ, φ ± (2n + 1)×180°, z), where n is any integer. Moreover, if the radius ρ is zero, the azimuth is arbitrary. plane shows the points with z=1, and the yellow half-plane shows the points with φ=−60°. The z-axis is vertical and the xaxis is highlighted in green. The three surfaces intersect at the point P with those coordinates (shown as a black sphere); the Cartesian coordinates of P are roughly (1.0, −1.732, 1.0). In situations where one needs a unique set of coordinates for each point, one may restrict the radius to be non-negative (ρ ≥ 0) and the azimuth φ to lie in a specific interval spanning 360°, such as (−180°,+180°] or [0,360°]. Cylindrical Coordinate Surfaces. The three orthogonal components, ρ (green), φ (red), and z (blue), each increasing at a constant rate. The point is at the intersection between the three colored surfaces. Conventions The notation for cylindrical coordinates is not uniform (ρ, φ, z), where ρ is the radial coordinate, φ the azimuth, and z the height. However, the radius is also often denoted r, the azimuth by θ or t, and the third coordinate by h or (if the cylindrical axis is considered horizontal) x, or any contextspecific letter. Coordinate system conversions The cylindrical coordinate system is one of many threedimensional coordinate systems. The following formulae may be used to convert between them. Cartesian coordinates For the conversion between cylindrical and Cartesian coordinate co-ordinates, it is convenient to assume that the reference plane of the former is the Cartesian x–y plane (with equation z = 0), and the cylindrical axis is the Cartesian z axis. Then the z coordinate is the same in both systems, and the correspondence between cylindrical (ρ,φ) and Cartesian (x,y) are the same as for polar coordinates, namely x cos y sin The coordinate surfaces of the cylindrical coordinates (ρ, φ, z). The red cylinder shows the points with ρ=2, the blue in one direction, and x 2 y2 The arcsin function is the inverse of the sine function, and is assumed to return an angle in the range [−π/2,+π/2] = [−90°,+90°]. These formulas yield an azimuth φ in the range [−90°,+270°]. Spherical coordinates Spherical coordinates (radius r, elevation or inclination θ, azimuth φ), may be converted into cylindrical coordinates by: θ is elevation: θ is inclination: r cos r sin z r sin z r cos Spherical coordinates, also called spherical polar coordinates (Walton 1967, Arfken 1985), are a system of curvilinear coordinates that are natural for describing positions on a sphere or spheroid. Define ѳ to be the azimuthal angle in the x-y plane from the x-axis with 0 2 (denoted when referred to as the longitude), to be the polar angle (also known as the LECTURE NO.:04 SPHERICAL COORDINATE SYSTEM zenith angle and colatitude, with 90 0 where is the latitude) from the positive z-axis with 0 , and r to be A spherical coordinate system is a coordinate system for three-dimensional space where the position of a point is specified by three numbers: the radial distance of that point from a fixed origin, its polar angle measured from a fixed zenith direction, and the azimuth angle of its orthogonal projection on a reference plane that passes through the origin and is orthogonal to the zenith, measured from a fixed reference direction on that plane. distance (radius) from a point to the origin. This is the convention commonly used in mathematics. In this work, following the mathematics convention, the symbols for the radial, azimuth, and zenith angle coordinates are taken as r, , and , respectively. Note that this definition provides a logical extension of the usual polar coordinates notation, with remaining the angle in the xy plane and becoming the angle out of that plane. The radial distance is also called the radius or radial coordinate. The polar angle may be called co-latitude, zenith angle, normal angle, or inclination angle. The use of symbols and the order of the coordinates differs between sources. In one system frequently encountered in physics (r, θ, φ) gives the radial distance, polar angle, and azimuthal angle, whereas in another system used in many mathematics books (r, θ, φ) gives the radial distance, azimuthal angle, and polar angle. In both systems ρ is often used instead of r. Other conventions are also used, so great care needs to be taken to check which one is being used. Unique coordinates Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as commonly used in physics: radial distance r, polar angle θ (theta), and azimuthal angle φ (phi). The symbol ρ (rho) is often used instead of r. Any spherical coordinate triplet (r, θ, φ) specifies a single point of three-dimensional space. On the other hand, every point has infinitely many equivalent spherical coordinates. One can add or subtract any number of full turns to either angular measure without changing the angles themselves, and therefore without changing the point. It is also convenient, in many contexts, to allow negative radial distances, with the convention that (−r, θ, φ) is equivalent to (r, θ + 180°, φ) for any r, θ, and φ. Moreover, (r, −θ, φ) is equivalent to (r, θ, φ + 180°). If it is necessary to define a unique set of spherical coordinates for each point, one may restrict their ranges. A common choice is: Spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) as often used in mathematics: radial distance r, azimuthal angle θ, and polar angle φ. The meanings of θ and φ have been swapped compared to the physics convention. r≥0 0° ≤ θ ≤ 180° (π rad) 0° ≤ φ < 360° (2π rad) However, the azimuth φ is often restricted to the interval (−180°, +180°], or (−π, +π] in radians, instead of [0, 360°). This is the standard convention for geographic longitude. The range [0°, 180°] for inclination is equivalent to [−90°, +90°] for elevation (latitude). Even with these restrictions, if θ is zero or 180° (elevation is 90° or −90°) then the azimuth angle is arbitrary; and if r is zero, both azimuth and inclination/elevation are arbitrary. To make the coordinates unique, one can use the convention that in these cases the arbitrary coordinates are zero. y x arctan Conversely, the Cartesian coordinates may be retrieved from the spherical coordinates (radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ), where r ∈ [0, ∞), θ ∈ [0, π], φ ∈ [0, 2π), by: x r sin cos y r sin sin z r cos Coordinate system conversions Cylindrical coordinates As the spherical coordinate system is only one of many threedimensional coordinate systems, there exist equations for converting coordinates between the spherical coordinate system and others. Cylindrical coordinates (radius ρ, azimuth φ, elevation z) may be converted into spherical coordinates (radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ), by the formulas Cartesian coordinates The spherical coordinates of a point in the ISO convention (radius r, inclination θ, azimuth φ) can be obtained from its Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z) by the formulae r x2 y2 z2 arccos x y2 z2 arctan z arccos 2 2 z z z 2 r 2 z2 Conversely, the spherical coordinates may be converted into cylindrical coordinates by the formulae r sin z r cos LECTURE NO.06 Differential Elements of Length, Surface, and Volume Rectangular coordinate system A differential volume element in the rectangular coordinate system is generated by making differential changes dx, dy, and dz along the unit vectors x, y and z, respectively, as illustrated in Figure 2.18a. The differential volume is given by the expression The general differential length element from P to Q is Cylindrical coordinate system The differential surfaces in the positive direction of the unit vectors are Figure above shows differential elements in a rectangular coordinate system The volume is enclosed by six differential surfaces. Each surface is defined by a unit vector normal to that surface. Thus, we can express the differential surfaces in the direction of positive unit vectors (see Figure 2.18b) as Figure: Differential elements in a cylindrical coordinate system The differential length vector from P to Q is The surface element in a surface of azimuth vertical half-plane) is Spherical coordinate system The volume element spanning from to and to is LECTURE NO.07 constant (a , to , Electric field due to Continuous charge Distributions Point Charge: Charge whose volume is very small when compared to the distance of separation under consideration. Line Charge: Charge whose surface area is very small when compared to its length. The surface element spanning from to and on a spherical surface at (constant) radius is to Thus the differential solid angle is Surface Charge: Charge whose thickness is very small when compared to its area. Volume Charge: A charged object comprising of three dimensions. Coulomb’s law can be applied to find the force exerted on some point charge q due to line, surface & volume distribution of charges. Here the charges are not concentrated rather they are distributed. In this situation the total sum must be replaced by integral since a continuous distribution of charges are taken care of. Electric field due to Continuous Uniform charge Distributions The surface element in a surface of polar angle cone with vertex the origin) is constant (a The charge density ( L in C/m), surface charge density ( S in C/m2), volume charge density ( V in C/m3) Line charge dQ L dl of conductor & not in their interiors, hence S is known as surface Surface charge dQ S ds charge density. Volume charge dQ v dv LECTURE NO.08 S dS a (Surface charge) Hence Electric field intensity E R 4 0 R 2 E dV a R (Volume charge) 40 R 2 Del operator V Volume Charge density ( V ) The space between the control grid and thee cathode in the electron gun assembly of a cathode ray tube operating with space charge, we can replace this distribution of very small particles with a smooth continuous distribution described by a volume charge density and its unit is Coulombs/m3. Line charge density ( L ) If a filament like distribution of volume charge is considered such as a very fine, sharp beam in a cathode ray tube of very small radius it is convenient to heat the charge as a line charge density. its unit is Coulombs/m. Surface charge density ( S ) One basic charge configuration often used to approximate that found on the conductors of a strip transmission line or parallel plate capacitor is the infinite sheet of charge having a uniform charge density of S Coulomb/m2.The static charges reside on the surface Del operator,represented bythe nabla symbol Del, or nabla, is an operator used in mathematics, in particular, in vector calculus, as a vector differential operator, usually represented by the nabla symbol ∇. When applied to a function defined on a one-dimensional domain, it denotes its standard derivative as defined in calculus. When applied to a field (a function defined on a multi-dimensional domain), del may denote the gradient (locally steepest slope) of a scalar field (or sometimes of a vector field, as in the Navier–Stokes equations), the divergence of a vector field, or the curl (rotation) of a vector field, depending on the way it is applied. Strictly speaking, del is not a specific operator, but rather a convenient mathematical notation for those three operators, that makes many equations easier to write and remember. The del symbol can be interpreted as a vector of partial derivative operators, and its three possible meanings—gradient, divergence, and curl—can be formally viewed as the product of scalars, dot product, and cross product, respectively, of the del "operator" with the field. These formal products do not necessarily commute with other operators or products. Definition In the Cartesian coordinate system Rn with coordinates and standard basis defined in terms of partial derivative operators as , del is In three-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system R3 with coordinates written as and standard basis , del is It always points in the direction of greatest increase of f, and it has a magnitude equal to the maximum rate of increase at the point—just like a standard derivative. In particular, if a hill is defined as a height function over a plane h(x,y), the 2d projection of the gradient at a given location will be a vector in the xy-plane (visualizable as an arrow on a map) pointing along the steepest direction. The magnitude of the gradient is the value of this steepest slope. In particular, this notation is powerful because the gradient product rule looks very similar to the 1d-derivative case: However, the rules for dot products do not turn out to be simple, as illustrated by: Del can also be expressed in other coordinate systems, see for example del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates. Notational uses Divergence Del is used as a shorthand form to simplify many long mathematical expressions. It is most commonly used to simplify expressions for the gradient, divergence, curl, directional derivative, and Laplacian. The divergence of a vector field is a scalar function that can be represented as: Gradient The vector derivative of a scalar field f is called the gradient, and it can be represented as: The divergence is roughly a measure of a vector field's increase in the direction it points; but more accurately, it is a measure of that field's tendency to converge toward or repel from a point. The power of the del notation is shown by the following product rule: The formula for the vector product is slightly less intuitive, because this product is not commutative: Directional derivative The directional derivative of a scalar field f(x,y,z) in the direction is defined as: Curl The curl of a vector field is a vector function that can be represented as: The curl at a point is proportional to the on-axis torque to which a tiny pinwheel would be subjected if it were centered at that point. The vector product operation can be visualized as a pseudodeterminant: This gives the change of a field f in the direction of a. In operator notation, the element in parentheses can be considered a single coherent unit; fluid dynamics uses this convention extensively, terming it the convective derivative—the "moving" derivative of the fluid. Laplacian The Laplace operator is a scalar operator that can be applied to either vector or scalar fields; for cartesian coordinate systems it is defined as: and the definition for more general coordinate systems is given in Vector Laplacian. Again the power of the notation is shown by the product rule: ) Unfortunately the rule for the vector product does not turn out to be simple: The Laplacian is ubiquitous throughout modern mathematical physics, appearing in Laplace's equation, Poisson's equation, the heat equation, the wave equation, and the Schrödinger equation—to name a few. Second derivatives two of them are always equal: DCG chart: A simple chart depicting all rules pertaining to second derivatives. D, C, G, L and CC stand for divergence, curl, gradient, Laplacian and curl of curl, respectively. Arrows indicate existence of second derivatives. Blue circle in the middle represents curl of curl, whereas the other two red circles (dashed) mean that DD and GG do not exist. When del operates on a scalar or vector, either a scalar or vector is returned. Because of the diversity of vector products (scalar, dot, cross) one application of del already gives rise to three major derivatives: the gradient (scalar product), divergence (dot product), and curl (cross product). Applying these three sorts of derivatives again to each other gives five possible second derivatives, for a scalar field f or a vector field v; the use of the scalar Laplacian and vector Laplacian gives two more: These are of interest principally because they are not always unique or independent of each other. As long as the functions are well-behaved, two of them are always zero: The 3 remaining vector derivatives are related by the equation: And one of them can even be expressed with the tensor product, if the functions are well-behaved: LECTURE NO.:09 GRADIENT OF A SCALAR The gradient of the function f(x,y) = −(cos2x + cos2y)2 depicted as a projected vector field on the bottom plane. The gradient (or gradient vector field) of a scalar function f(x1, x2, x3, ..., xn) is denoted ∇f or where ∇ (the nabla symbol) denotes the vector differential operator, del. The notation "grad(f)" is also commonly used for the gradient. The gradient of f is defined as the unique vector field whose dot product with any vector v at each point x is the directional derivative of f along v. That is, is: In some applications it is customary to represent the gradient as a row vector or column vector of its components in a rectangular coordinate system. In a rectangular coordinate system, the gradient is the vector field whose components are the partial derivatives of f: where the ei are the orthogonal unit vectors pointing in the coordinate directions. When a function also depends on a parameter such as time, the gradient often refers simply to the vector of its spatial derivatives only. In the three-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system, this is given by where i, j, k are the standard unit vectors. For example, the gradient of the function In the above two images, the values of the function are represented in black and white, black representing higher values, and its corresponding gradient is represented by blue arrows. In mathematics, the gradient is a generalization of the usual concept of derivative of a function in one dimension to a function in several dimensions. If f(x1, ..., xn) is a differentiable, scalar-valued function of standard Cartesian coordinates in Euclidean space, its gradient is the vector whose components are the n partial derivatives of f. It is thus a vector-valued function. Similarly to the usual derivative, the gradient represents the slope of the tangent of the graph of the function. More precisely, the gradient points in the direction of the greatest rate of increase of the function and its magnitude is the slope of the graph in that direction. The components of the gradient in coordinates are the coefficients of the variables in the equation of the tangent space to the graph. This characterizing property of the gradient allows it to be defined independently of a choice of coordinate system, as a vector field whose components in a coordinate system will transform when going from one coordinate system to another. The Jacobian is the generalization of the gradient for vector-valued functions of several variables and differentiable maps between Euclidean spaces or, more generally, manifolds. A further generalization for a function between Banach spaces is the Fréchet derivative. Linear approximation to a function The gradient of a function f from the Euclidean space ℝn to ℝ at any particular point x0 in ℝn characterizes the best linear approximation to f at x0. The approximation is as follows: for x close to x0, where is the gradient of f computed at x0, and the dot denotes the dot product on ℝn. This equation is equivalent to the first two terms in the multi-variable Taylor Series expansion of f at x0. Gradient as a derivative Let U be an open set in Rn. If the function f : U → R is differentiable, then the differential of f is the (Fréchet) derivative of f. Thus ∇f is a function from U to the space R such that where ⋅ is the dot product. As a consequence, the usual properties of the derivative hold for the gradient: Linearity The gradient is linear in the sense that if f and g are two real-valued functions differentiable at the point a ∈ Rn, and α and β are two constants, then αf + βg is differentiable at a, and moreover Product rule If f and g are real-valued functions differentiable at a point a ∈ Rn, then the product rule asserts that the product (fg)(x) = f(x)g(x) of the functions f and g is differentiable at a, and Chain rule Suppose that f : A → R is a real-valued function defined on a subset A of Rn, and that f is differentiable at a point a. There are two forms of the chain rule applying to the gradient. First, suppose that the function g is a parametric curve; that is, a function g : I → Rn maps a subset I ⊂ R into Rn. If g is differentiable at a point c ∈ I such that g(c) = a, then where ∘ is the composition operator : (g ∘ f )(x) = g(f(x)). More generally, if instead I ⊂ Rk, then the following holds: More generally, any embedded hypersurface in a Riemannian manifold can be cut out by an equation of the form F(P) = 0 such that dF is nowhere zero. The gradient of F is then normal to the hypersurface. Similarly, an affine algebraic hypersurface may be defined by an equation F(x1, ..., xn) = 0, where F is a polynomial. The gradient of F is zero at a singular point of the hypersurface (this is the definition of a singular point). At a non-singular point, it is a nonzero normal vector. Cylindrical and spherical coordinates where (Dg)T denotes the transpose Jacobian matrix. For the second form of the chain rule, suppose that h : I → R is a real valued function on a subset I of R, and that h is differentiable at the point f(a) ∈ I. Then In cylindrical coordinates, the gradient is given by (Schey 1992, pp. 139–142): Further properties and applications where ϕ is the azimuthal angle, z is the axial coordinate, and eρ, eφ and ez are unit vectors pointing along the coordinate directions. A level surface, or isosurface, is the set of all points where some function has a given value. In spherical coordinates (Schey 1992, pp. 139–142): If f is differentiable, then the dot product (∇f)x ⋅ v of the gradient at a point x with a vector v gives the directional derivative of f at x in the direction v. It follows that in this case the gradient of f is orthogonal to the level sets of f. For example, a level surface in three-dimensional space is defined by an equation of the form F(x, y, z) = c. The gradient of F is then normal to the surface. where ϕ is the azimuth angle and θ is the zenith angle. For the gradient in other orthogonal coordinate systems, see Orthogonal coordinates (Differential operators in three dimensions). Gradient of a vector FIELD In rectangular coordinates, the gradient of a vector field f = (f1, f2, f3) is defined by In physical terms, the divergence of a three-dimensional vector field is the extent to which the vector field flow behaves like a source or a sink at a given point. It is a local measure of its "outgoingness"—the extent to which there is more exiting an infinitesimal region of space than entering it. If the divergence is nonzero at some point then there must be a source or sink at that position. (Note that we are imagining the vector field to be like the velocity vector field of a fluid (in motion) when we use the terms flow, sink and so on.) where the Einstein summation notation is used and the product of the vectors ei, ek is a tensor of type (2,0), or the Jacobian matrix . In curvilinear coordinates, or more generally on a curved manifold, the gradient involves Christoffel symbols: where gjk are the components of the metric tensor and the ei are the coordinate vectors. Expressed more invariantly, the gradient of a vector field f can be defined by the Levi-Civita connection and metric tensor:[1] where is the connection. LECTURE NO.:10 DIVERGENCE OF A VECTOR More rigorously, the divergence of a vector field F at a point p is defined as the limit of the net flow of F across the smooth boundary of a three-dimensional region V divided by the volume of V as V shrinks to p. Formally, where |V | is the volume of V, S(V) is the boundary of V, and the integral is a surface integral with n being the outward unit normal to that surface. The result, div F, is a function of p. From this definition it also becomes explicitly visible that div F can be seen as the source density of the flux of F. In light of the physical interpretation, a vector field with constant zero divergence is called incompressible or solenoidal – in this case, no net flow can occur across any closed surface. The intuition that the sum of all sources minus the sum of all sinks should give the net flow outwards of a region is made precise by the divergence theorem. Application in Cartesian coordinates Let x, y, z be a system of Cartesian coordinates in 3dimensional Euclidean space, and let i, j, k be the corresponding basis of unit vectors. The divergence of a continuously differentiable vector field F = U i + V j + W k is equal to the scalar-valued function: Cylindrical coordinates For a vector expressed in cylindrical coordinates as where ea is the unit vector in direction a, the divergence is Although expressed in terms of coordinates, the result is invariant under orthogonal transformations, as the physical interpretation suggests. The common notation for the divergence ∇ · F is a convenient mnemonic, where the dot denotes an operation reminiscent of the dot product: take the components of ∇ (see del), apply them to the components of F, and sum the results. Because applying an operator is different from multiplying the components, this is considered an abuse of notation. The divergence of a continuously differentiable secondorder tensor field is a first-order tensor field: Spherical coordinates In spherical coordinates, with the angle with the z axis and the rotation around the z axis, the divergence reads LECTURE NO.11 DIVERGENCE THEOREM In vector calculus, the divergence theorem, also known as Gauss's theorem or Ostrogradsky's theorem, is a result that relates the flow (that is, flux) of a vector field through a surface to the behavior of the vector field inside the surface. More precisely, the divergence theorem states that the outward flux of a vector field through a closed surface is equal to the volume integral of the divergence over the region inside the surface. Intuitively, it states that the sum of all sources minus the sum of all sinks gives the net flow out of a region. The divergence theorem is an important result for the mathematics of engineering, in particular in electrostatics and fluid dynamics. In physics and engineering, the divergence theorem is usually applied in three dimensions. However, it generalizes to any number of dimensions. In one dimension, it is equivalent to the fundamental theorem of calculus. In two dimensions, it is equivalent to Green's theorem. The divergence theorem can be used to calculate a flux through a closed surface that fully encloses a volume, like any of the surfaces on the left. It can not directly be used to calculate the flux through surfaces with boundaries, like those on the right. (Surfaces are blue, boundaries are red.) The theorem is a special case of the more general Stokes' theorem Suppose V is a subset of (in the case of n = 3, V represents a volume in 3D space) which is compact and has a piecewise smooth boundary S (also indicated with ∂V = S ). If F is a continuously differentiable vector field defined on a neighborhood of V, then we have:[6] Mathematical statement A region V bounded by the surface S = ∂V with the surface normal n The left side is a volume integral over the volume V, the right side is the surface integral over the boundary of the volume V. The closed manifold ∂V is quite generally the boundary of V oriented by outward-pointing normals, and n is the outward pointing unit normal field of the boundary ∂V. (dS may be used as a shorthand for ndS.) The symbol within the two integrals stresses once more that ∂V is a closed surface. In terms of the intuitive description above, the left-hand side of the equation represents the total of the sources in the volume V, and the right-hand side represents the total flow across the boundary ∂V. Applying the divergence theorem to the crossproduct of a vector field F and a non-zero constant vector c, the following theorem can be proven:[7] Corollaries By applying the divergence theorem in various contexts, other useful identities can be derived Applying the divergence theorem to the product of a scalar function g and a vector field F, the result is A special case of this is F = ∇ f , in which case the theorem is the basis for Green's identities. Applying the divergence theorem to the crossproduct of two vector fields F × G, the result is Example Applying the divergence theorem to the product of a scalar function, f , and a non-zero constant vector c, the following theorem can be proven:[7] The vector field corresponding to the example shown. Note, vectors may point into or out of the sphere. Suppose we wish to evaluate where S is the unit sphere defined by and F is the vector field LECTURE NO.12 CURL OF A VECTOR In vector calculus, the curl is a vector operator that describes the infinitesimal rotation of a 3-dimensional vector field. At every point in the field, the curl of that point is represented by a vector. The attributes of this vector (length and direction) characterize the rotation at that point. The direction of the curl is the axis of rotation, as determined by the right-hand rule, and the magnitude of the curl is the magnitude of rotation. If the vector field represents the flow velocity of a moving fluid, then the curl is the circulation density of the fluid. A vector field whose curl is zero is called irrotational. The curl is a form of differentiation for vector fields. The corresponding form of the fundamental theorem of calculus is Stokes' theorem, which relates the surface integral of the curl of a vector field to the line integral of the vector field around the boundary curve. The alternative terminology rotor or rotational and alternative notations rot F and ∇ × F are often used (the former especially in many European countries, the latter, using the del operator and the cross product, is more used in other countries) for curl and curl F. Unlike the gradient and divergence, curl does not generalize as simply to other dimensions; some generalizations are possible, but only in three dimensions is the geometrically defined curl of a vector field again a vector field. This is a similar phenomenon as in the 3 dimensional cross product, and the connection is reflected in the notation ∇ × for the curl. The name "curl" was first suggested by James Clerk Maxwell in 1871[1] but the concept was apparently first used in the construction of an optical field theory by James MacCullagh in 1839. Definition Convention for vector orientation of the line integral Implicitly, curl is defined by: The components of F at position r, normal and tangent to a closed curve C in a plane, enclosing a planar vector area A = An. The curl of a vector field F, denoted by curl F, or ∇ × F, or rot F, at a point is defined in terms of its projection onto various lines through the point. If is any unit vector, the projection of the curl of F onto is defined to be the limiting value of a closed line integral in a plane orthogonal to as the path used in the integral becomes infinitesimally close to the point, divided by the area enclosed. As such, the curl operator maps continuously differentiable functions f : R3 → R3 to continuous functions g : R3 → R3. In fact, it maps Ck functions in R3 to Ck-1 functions in R3. where is a line integral along the boundary of the area in question, and |A| is the magnitude of the area. If is an outward pointing in-plane normal, whereas is the unit vector perpendicular to the plane (see caption at right), then the orientation of C is chosen so that a tangent vector to C is positively oriented if and only if forms a positively oriented basis for R3 (righthand rule). The above formula means that the curl of a vector field is defined as the infinitesimal area density of the circulation of that field. To this definition fit naturally the Kelvin-Stokes theorem, as a global formula corresponding to the definition, and the following "easy to memorize" definition of the curl in curvilinear orthogonal coordinates, e.g. in Cartesian coordinates, spherical, cylindrical, or even elliptical or parabolical coordinates: representations have been derived. The notation ∇ × F has its origins in the similarities to the 3 dimensional cross product, and it is useful as a mnemonic in Cartesian coordinates if ∇ is taken as a vector differential operator del. Such notation involving operators is common in physics and algebra. However, in certain coordinate systems, such as polar-toroidal coordinates (common in plasma physics), using the notation ∇ × F will yield an incorrect result. , , . Note that the equation for each component, can be obtained by exchanging each occurrence of a subscript 1, 2, 3 in cyclic permutation: 1→2, 2→3, and 3→1 (where the subscripts represent the relevant indices). Expanded in Cartesian coordinates (see Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates for spherical and cylindrical coordinate representations), ∇ × F is, for F composed of [Fx, Fy, Fz]: If (x1, x2, x3) are the Cartesian coordinates and (u1,u2,u3) are the orthogonal coordinates, then where i, j, and k are the unit vectors for the x-, y-, and zaxes, respectively. This expands as follows:[6] is the length of the coordinate vector corresponding to ui. The remaining two components of curl result from cyclic permutation of indices: 3,1,2 → 1,2,3 → 2,3,1. Usage In practice, the above definition is rarely used because in virtually all cases, the curl operator can be applied using some set of curvilinear coordinates, for which simpler Although expressed in terms of coordinates, the result is invariant under proper rotations of the coordinate axes but the result inverts under reflection. In a general coordinate system, the curl is given by where ε denotes the Levi-Civita symbol, the metric tensor is used to lower the index on F, and the Einstein summation convention implies that repeated indices are summed over. Equivalently, where ek are the coordinate vector fields. Equivalently, using the exterior derivative, the curl can be expressed as: Here and are the musical isomorphisms, and is the Hodge dual. This formula shows how to calculate the curl of F in any coordinate system, and how to extend the curl to any oriented three-dimensional Riemannian manifold. Since this depends on a choice of orientation, curl is a chiral operation. In other words, if the orientation is reversed, then the direction of the curl is also reversed. Simply by visual inspection, we can see that the field is rotating. If we place a paddle wheel anywhere, we see immediately its tendency to rotate clockwise. Using the right-hand rule, we expect the curl to be into the page. If we are to keep a right-handed coordinate system, into the page will be in the negative z direction. The lack of x and y directions is analogous to the cross product operation. If we calculate the curl: Examples A simple vector field Take the vector field, which depends on x and y linearly: Its plot looks like this: Which is indeed in the negative z direction, as expected. In this case, the curl is actually a constant, irrespective of position. The "amount" of rotation in the above vector field is the same at any point (x, y). Plotting the curl of F is not very interesting: A more involved example Suppose we now consider a slightly more complicated vector field: Its plot: We might not see any rotation initially, but if we closely look at the right, we see a larger field at, say, x=4 than at x=3. Intuitively, if we placed a small paddle wheel there, the larger "current" on its right side would cause the paddlewheel to rotate clockwise, which corresponds to a curl in the negative z direction. By contrast, if we look at a point on the left and placed a small paddle wheel there, the larger "current" on its left side would cause the paddlewheel to rotate counterclockwise, which corresponds to a curl in the positive z direction. Let's check out our guess by doing the math: Indeed the curl is in the positive z direction for negative x and in the negative z direction for positive x, as expected. Since this curl is not the same at every point, its plot is a bit more interesting: We note that the plot of this curl has no dependence on y or z (as it shouldn't) and is in the negative z direction for positive x and in the positive z direction for negative x. If φ is a scalar valued function and F is a vector field, then Identities Consider the example ∇ × (v × F). Using Cartesian coordinates, it can be shown that In the case where the vector field v and ∇ are interchanged: which introduces the Feynman subscript notation ∇F, which means the subscripted gradient operates only on the factor F. Descriptive examples In a vector field describing the linear velocities of each part of a rotating disk, the curl has the same value at all points. Of the four Maxwell's equations, two—Faraday's law and Ampère's law—can be compactly expressed using curl. Faraday's law states that the curl of an electric field is equal to the opposite of the time rate of change of the magnetic field, while Ampère's law relates the curl of the magnetic field to the current and rate of change of the electric field. Generalizations Another example is ∇ × (∇ × F). Using Cartesian coordinates, it can be shown that: which can be construed as a special case of the previous example with the substitution v → ∇. (Note: ∇2F represents the vector Laplacian of F) The curl of the gradient of any scalar field φ is always the zero vector: The vector calculus operations of grad, curl, and div are most easily generalized and understood in the context of differential forms, which involves a number of steps. In a nutshell, they correspond to the derivatives of 0-forms, 1forms, and 2-forms, respectively. The geometric interpretation of curl as rotation corresponds to identifying bivectors (2-vectors) in 3 dimensions with the special orthogonal Lie algebra so(3) of infinitesimal rotations (in coordinates, skew-symmetric 3 × 3 matrices), while representing rotations by vectors corresponds to identifying 1-vectors (equivalently, 2vectors) and so(3), these all being 3-dimensional spaces. Differential In 3 dimensions, a differential 0-form is simply a function f(x, y, z); a differential 1-form is the following expression: a differential 2form is the formal sum: and a differential 3-form is defined by a single term: (Here the a-coefficients are real functions; the "wedge products", e.g. can be interpreted as some kind of oriented area elements, , etc.) The exterior derivative of a k-form in R3 is defined as the (k+1)-form from above (and in Rn if, e.g., then the exterior derivative d leads to The exterior derivative of a 1-form is therefore a 2-form, and that of a 2-form is a 3-form. On the other hand, because of the interchangeability of mixed derivatives, e.g. because of the twofold application of the exterior derivative leads to 0. Thus, denoting the space of k-forms by exterior derivative by d one gets a sequence: Here algebra and the is the space of sections of the exterior vector bundle over dimension is the binomial coefficient Rn, whose note that for k > 3 or k < 0. Writing only dimensions, one obtains a row of Pascal's triangle: 0 → 1 → 3 → 3 → 1 → 0; the 1-dimensional fibers correspond to functions, and the 3-dimensional fibers to vector fields, as described below. Note that modulo suitable identifications, the three nontrivial occurrences of the exterior derivative correspond to grad, curl, and div. Differential forms and the differential can be defined on any Euclidean space, or indeed any manifold, without any notion of a Riemannian metric. On a Riemannian manifold, or more generally pseudo-Riemannian manifold, k-forms can be identified with k-vector fields (k-forms are k-covector fields, and a pseudo-Riemannian metric gives an isomorphism between vectors and covectors), and on an oriented vector space with a nondegenerate form (an isomorphism between vectors and covectors), there is an isomorphism between kvectors and (n−k)-vectors; in particular on (the tangent space of) an oriented pseudo-Riemannian manifold. Thus on an oriented pseudo-Riemannian manifold, one can interchange k-forms, k-vector fields, (n−k)-forms, and (n−k)-vector fields; this is known as Hodge duality. Concretely, on R3 this is given by: 1-forms and 1-vector fields: the 1-form corresponds to the vector field 1-forms and 2-forms: one replaces dx by the "dual" quantity (i.e., omit dx), and likewise, taking care of orientation: dy corresponds to and dz corresponds to Thus the form corresponds to the "dual form" Thus, identifying 0-forms and 3-forms with functions, and 1-forms and 2-forms with vector fields: grad takes a function (0-form) to a vector field (1form); curl takes a vector field (1-form) to a vector field (2-form); div takes a vector field (2-form) to a function (3form) On the other hand the fact that d2 = 0 corresponds to the identities curl grad f = 0 and for any function f or vector field Grad and div generalize to all oriented pseudoRiemannian manifolds, with the same geometric interpretation, because the spaces of 0-forms and n-forms is always (fiberwise) 1-dimensional and can be identified with scalar functions, while the spaces of 1-forms and (n−1)-forms are always fiberwise n-dimensional and can be identified with vector fields. Curl does not generalize in this way to 4 or more dimensions (or down to 2 or fewer dimensions); in 4 dimensions the dimensions are 0 → 1 → 4 → 6 → 4 → 1 → 0; so the curl of a 1-vector field (fiberwise 4-dimensional) is a 2-vector field, which is fiberwise 6-dimensional, one has which yields a sum of six independent terms, and cannot be identified with a 1-vector field. Nor can one meaningfully go from a 1-vector field to a 2-vector field to a 3-vector field (4 → 6 → 4), as taking the differential twice yields zero (d2 = 0). Thus there is no curl function from vector fields to vector fields in other dimensions arising in this way. However, one can define a curl of a vector field as a 2vector field in general, as described below. LECTURE NO.13 LAPLACIAN OF A SCALAR The Laplacian for a scalar function differential operator defined by is a scalar generalization to a tensor Laplacian. where the are the scale factors of the coordinate .Note that the operator is commonly written as by mathematicians The Laplacian is extremely important in mechanics, electromagnetics, wave theory, and quantum mechanics, and appears in Laplace's equation The following table gives the form of the Laplacian in several common coordinate systems. coordinate system Cartesian coordinates cylindrical coordinates the Helmholtz differential equation the wave equation parabolic coordinates parabolic cylindrical coordinates spherical coordinates and the Schrödinger equation The finite difference form is The analogous operator obtained by generalizing from three dimensions to four-dimensional spacetime is denoted and is known as the d'Alembertian. A version of the Laplacian that operates on vector functions is known as the vector Laplacian, and a tensor Laplacian can be similarly defined. The square of the Laplacian is known as the biharmonic operator. A vector Laplacian can also be defined, as can its For a pure radial function , Using the vector derivative identity electrostatic force of interaction between two point charges is directly proportional to the scalar multiplication of the magnitudes of charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.[12] so The force is along the straight line joining them. If the two charges have the same sign, the electrostatic force between them is repulsive; if they have different sign, the force between them is attractive. Therefore, for a radial power law, Coulomb's law can also be stated as a simple mathematical expression. The scalar and vector forms of the mathematical equation are and LECTURE NO.14 Coulomb's law Coulomb's law, or Coulomb's inverse-square law, is a law of physics describing the electrostatic interaction between electrically charged particles. The law was first published in 1785 by French physicist Charles Augustin de Coulomb and was essential to the development of the theory of electromagnetism. It is analogous to Isaac Newton's inverse-square law of universal gravitation. Coulomb's law can be used to derive Gauss's law, and vice versa. The law has been tested heavily, and all observations have upheld the law's principle. Coulomb's law states that:The magnitude of the respectively, where is Coulomb's constant ( ), and are the signed magnitudes of the charges, the scalar is the distance between the charges, the vector is the vectorial distance between the charges, and (a unit vector pointing from to ). The vector form of the equation calculates the force applied on by . If is used instead, then the effect on can be found. It can be also calculated using Newton's third law: . Units Electromagnetic theory is usually expressed using the standard SI units. Force is measured in newtons, charge in coulombs, and distance in metres. Coulomb's constant is given by . The constant is the 2 −2 −1 permittivity of free space in C m N . And is the relative permittivity of the material in which the charges are immersed, and is dimensionless. The SI derived units for the electric field are volts per meter, newtons per coulomb, or tesla meters per second. Coulomb's law and Coulomb's constant can also be interpreted in various terms: Electric field Atomic units. In atomic units the force is expressed in hartrees per Bohr radius, the charge in terms of the elementary charge, and the distances in terms of the Bohr radius. Electrostatic units or Gaussian units. In electrostatic units and Gaussian units, the unit charge (esu or statcoulomb) is defined in such a way that the Coulomb constant k disappears because it has the value of one and becomes dimensionless. If the two charges have the same sign, the electrostatic force between them is repulsive; if they have different sign, the force between them is attractive. An electric field is a vector field that associates to each point in space the Coulomb force experienced by a test charge. In the simplest case, the field is considered to be generated solely by a single source point charge. The strength and direction of the Coulomb force on a test charge depends on the electric field that it finds itself in, such that . If the field is generated by a positive source point charge , the direction of the electric field points along lines directed radially outwards from it, i.e. in the direction that a positive point test charge would move if placed in the field. For a negative point source charge, the direction is radially inwards. The magnitude of the electric field can be derived from Coulomb's law. By choosing one of the point charges to be the source, and the other to be the test charge, it follows from Coulomb's law that the magnitude of the electric field created by a single source point charge at a certain distance from it in vacuum is given by: . Coulomb's constant Coulomb's constant is a proportionality factor that appears in Coulomb's law as well as in other electricrelated formulas. Denoted , it is also called the electric force constant or electrostatic constant, hence the subscript . The exact value of Coulomb's constant is: The absolute value of the force between two point charges and relates to the distance between the point charges and to the simple product of their charges. The diagram shows that like charges repel each other, and opposite charges attract each other. Conditions for validity When it is only of interest to know the magnitude of the electrostatic force (and not its direction), it may be easiest to consider a scalar version of the law. The scalar form of Coulomb's Law relates the magnitude and sign of the electrostatic force acting simultaneously on two point charges and as follows: There are two conditions to be fulfilled for the validity of Coulomb’s law: 1. The charges considered must be point charges. 2. They should be stationary with respect to each other. Scalar form where is the separation distance and is Coulomb's constant. If the product is positive, the force between the two charges is repulsive; if the product is negative, the force between them is attractive. Vector form to Newton's third law, is . System of discrete charges In the image, the vector is the force experienced by , and the vector is the force experienced by . When the forces are repulsive (as in the image) and when the forces are attractive (opposite to the image). The magnitude of the forces will always be equal. Coulomb's law states that the electrostatic force experienced by a charge, at position , in the vicinity of another charge, at position , in a vacuum is equal to: The law of superposition allows Coulomb's law to be extended to include any number of point charges. The force acting on a point charge due to a system of point charges is simply the vector addition of the individual forces acting alone on that point charge due to each one of the charges. The resulting force vector is parallel to the electric field vector at that point, with that point charge removed. The force on a small charge, at position , due to a system of discrete charges in vacuum is: where Where , , and the unit vector is the electric constant. The vector form of Coulomb's law is simply the scalar definition of the law with the direction given by the unit vector, , parallel with the line from charge to charge .[14] If both charges have the same sign (like charges) then the product is positive and the direction of the force on is given by ; the charges repel each other. If the charges have opposite signs then the product is negative and the direction of the force on is given by ; the charges attract each other. The electrostatic force experienced by , according and respectively of the direction of charges to ) are the charge, magnitude and position is a unit vector in the (a vector pointing from Continuous charge distribution In this case, the principle of linear superposition is also used. For a continuous charge distribution, an integral over the region containing the charge is equivalent to an infinite summation, treating each infinitesimal element of space as a point charge . The distribution of charge is usually linear, surface or volumetric. For a linear charge distribution (a good approximation for charge in a wire) where unit length at position , and element of length, gives the charge per is an infinitesimal . For a surface charge distribution (a good approximation for charge on a plate in a parallel plate capacitor) where gives the charge per unit area at position is an infinitesimal element of area, , and Experiment to verify Coulomb's law. For a volume charge distribution (such as charge within a bulk metal) where at position , and volume, gives the charge per unit volume is an infinitesimal element of The force on a small test charge at position in vacuum is given by the integral over the distribution of charge: Simple experiment to verify Coulomb's law It is possible to verify Coulomb's law with a simple experiment. Let's consider two small spheres of mass and same-sign charge , hanging from two ropes of negligible mass of length . The forces acting on each sphere are three: the weight , the rope tension and the electric force . Electric Field Intensity The concept of an electric field was introduced. It was stated that the electric field concept arose in an effort to explain action-at-a-distance forces. All charged objects create an electric field that extends outward into the space that surrounds it. The charge alters that space, causing any other charged object that enters the space to be affected by this field. The strength of the electric field is dependent upon how charged the object creating the field is and upon the distance of separation from the charged object. In this section of Lesson 4, we will investigate electric field from a numerical viewpoint - the electric field strength. If the electric field strength is denoted by the symbol E, then the equation can be rewritten in symbolic form as . The Force per Charge Ratio Electric field strength is a vector quantity; it has both magnitude and direction. The magnitude of the electric field strength is defined in terms of how it is measured. Let's suppose that an electric charge can be denoted by the symbol Q. This electric charge creates an electric field; since Q is the source of the electric field, we will refer to it as the source charge. The strength of the source charge's electric field could be measured by any other charge placed somewhere in its surroundings. The charge that is used to measure the electric field strength is referred to as a test charge since it is used to test the field strength. The test charge has a quantity of charge denoted by the symbol q. When placed within the electric field, the test charge will experience an electric force either attractive or repulsive. As is usually the case, this force will be denoted by the symbol F. The magnitude of the electric field is simply defined as the force per charge on the test charge. The standard metric units on electric field strength arise from its definition. Since electric field is defined as a force per charge, its units would be force units divided by charge units. In this case, the standard metric units are Newton/Coulomb or N/C. In the above discussion, you will note that two charges are mentioned - the source charge and the test charge. Two charges would always be necessary to encounter a force. In the electric world, it takes two to attract or repel. The equation for electric field strength (E) has one of the two charge quantities listed in it. Since there are two charges involved, a student will have to be ultimately careful to use the correct charge quantity when computing the electric field strength. The symbol q in the equation is the quantity of charge on the test charge (not the source charge). Recall that the electric field strength is defined in terms of how it is measured or tested; thus, the test charge finds its way into the equation. Electric field is the force per quantity of charge on the test charge. The electric field strength is not dependent upon the quantity of charge on the test charge. If you think about that statement for a little while, you might be bothered by it. (Of course if you don't think at all - ever - nothing really bothers you. Ignorance is bliss.) After all, the quantity of charge on the test charge (q) is in the equation for electric field. So how could electric field strength not be dependent upon q if q is in the equation? Good question. But if you think about it a little while longer, you will be able to answer your own question. (Ignorance might be bliss. But with a little extra thinking you might achieve insight, a state much better than bliss.) Increasing the quantity of charge on the test charge - say, by a factor of 2 - would increase the denominator of the equation by a factor of 2. But according to Coulomb's law, more charge also means more electric force (F). In fact, a twofold increase in q would be accompanied by a twofold increase in F. So as the denominator in the equation increases by a factor of two (or three or four), the numerator increases by the same factor. These two changes offset each other such that one can safely say that the electric field strength is not dependent upon the quantity of charge on the test charge. So regardless of what test charge is used, the electric field strength at any given location around the source charge Q will be measured to be the same. Coulomb's law equation. Coulomb's law states that the electric force between two charges is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers. When applied to our two charges - the source charge (Q) and the test charge (q) - the formula for electric force can be written as Another Electric Field Strength Formula Note that the derivation above shows that the test charge q was canceled from both numerator and denominator of the equation. The new formula for electric field strength (shown inside the box) expresses the field strength in terms of the two variables that affect it. The electric field strength is dependent upon the quantity of charge on the source charge (Q) and the distance of separation (d) from The above discussion pertained to defining electric field strength in terms of how it is measured. Now we will investigate a new equation that defines electric field strength in terms of the variables that affect the electric field strength. To do so, we will have to revisit the If the expression for electric force as given by Coulomb's law is substituted for force in the above E =F/q equation, a new equation can be derived as shown below. the source charge. separation distance decreases by a factor of 2, the electric field strength increases by a factor of 4 (2^2). An Inverse Square Law Like all formulas in physics, the formulas for electric field strength can be used to algebraically solve physics word problems. And like all formulas, these electric field strength formulas can also be used to guide our thinking about how an alteration of one variable might (or might not) affect another variable. One feature of this electric field strength formula is that it illustrates an inverse square relationship between electric field strength and distance. The strength of an electric field as created by source charge Q is inversely related to square of the distance from the source. This is known as an inverse square law. Electric field strength is location dependent, and its magnitude decreases as the distance from a location to the source increases. And by whatever factor the distance is changed, the electric field strength will change inversely by the square of that factor. So if separation distance increases by a factor of 2, the electric field strength decreases by a factor of 4 (2^2). If the separation distance increases by a factor of 3, the electric field strength decreases by a factor of 9 (3^2). If the separation distance increases by a factor of 4, the electric field strength decreases by a factor of 16 (4^2). And finally, if Use this principle of the inverse square relationship between electric field strength and distance to answer the first three questions in the Check Your Understanding section below. The Direction of the Electric Field Vector As mentioned earlier, electric field strength is a vector quantity. Unlike a scalar quantity, a vector quantity is not fully described unless there is a direction associated with it. The magnitude of the electric field vector is calculated as the force per charge on any given test charge located within the electric field. The force on the test charge could be directed either towards the source charge or directly away from it. The precise direction of the force is dependent upon whether the test charge and the source charge have the same type of charge (in which repulsion occurs) or the opposite type of charge (in which attraction occurs). To resolve the dilemma of whether the electric field vector is directed towards or away from the source charge, a convention has been established. The worldwide convention that is used by scientists is to define the direction of the electric field vector as the direction that a positive test charge is pushed or pulled when in the presence of the electric field. By using the convention of a positive test charge, everyone can agree upon the direction of E. LECTURE NO.15 Electrostatics : Electric Field & Potential Electrostatic Potential : Consider the expression for the electric field for a continuous charge distribution Thus we have two following relations LECTURE NO.17 Electric field due to Continuous charge Distributions The gradient operator can be taken outside as the gradient is with respect to unprimed variable , while the integration is with respect to primed variables which gives Point Charge: Charge whose volume is very small when compared to the distance of separation under consideration. Line Charge: Charge whose surface area is very small when compared to its length. Surface Charge: Charge whose thickness is very small when compared to its area. The divergence of the Electric field can be written as The Laplacian operator acting on unprimed variable can be taken inside the integration Volume Charge: A charged object comprising of three dimensions. Coulomb’s law can be applied to find the force exerted on some point charge q due to line, surface & volume distribution of charges. Here the charges are not concentrated rather they are distributed. In this situation the total sum must be replaced by integral since a continuous distribution of charges are taken care of. Electric field due to Continuous Uniform charge Distributions The charge density ( L in C/m), surface charge density ( S in C/m2), volume charge density ( V in C/m3) such as a very fine, sharp beam in a cathode ray tube of very small radius it is convenient to heat the charge as a line charge density. its unit is Coulombs/m. Surface charge density ( S ) Line charge dQ L dl One basic charge configuration often used to approximate that found on the conductors of a strip transmission line or parallel plate capacitor is the infinite sheet of charge having a Surface charge dQ S ds reside on the surface of conductor & not in their interiors, uniform charge density of S Coulomb/m2.The static charges hence S is known as surface charge density. Volume charge dQ v dv S dS a (Surface Hence Electric field intensity E R 4 0 R 2 Electric field due to Continuous charge Distribution due to Line charge: charge) E dV a R (Volume charge) 4 0 R 2 V Volume Charge density ( V ) The space between the control grid and thee cathode in the electron gun assembly of a cathode ray tube operating with space charge, we can replace this distribution of very small particles with a smooth continuous distribution described by a volume charge density and its unit is Coulombs/m3. Line charge density ( L ) If a filament like distribution of volume charge is considered wo point charges. Our variation tells us the Electric field due to a single point charge. What do we do if we have a continuous charge distribution? We can sum up the electric field caused by each tiny, infinitesimal part of the charge distribution. This means an integral over the charge distribution: For a single point charge Q, we had where r is the distance from the charge Q. Remember, E is only the magnitude of the electric field; we must take care of its vector nature separately! That's important! Now we have a distribution of charge and we must replace Q by dQ and E by dE -- and take care of the direction of E. r, the distance from the tiny, elemental, infinitesimal charge dQ to the point in question, is a function of where that charge dQ is. And, what does it mean to "integrate over the charge dQ"? We know how to integrate over a variable like dx, or a plane like dA = dx dy or dA = 2 r dr or dA = r d dr, or a volume like dV = dx dy dz. So we will need to change from this symbolic charge dQ to a charge density multiplied by some spatial differential, What is the electric field at point P because of a little piece of charge Q located at position x, as shown in the sketch? E = k Q / x2 We will carry out an integration from x = d to x = d + so we need to change this small amount of charge Q into a small length x, Q= dQ = dx E=k( x x) / x2 dQ = dA where dQ = dV =Q/ Look at Example in Serway's and Beichner's textbook (p.724): A rod of length has a uniform charge per unit length and a total charge Q. Calculate the electric field at a point P along the axis of the rod, a distance d from one end. dE = k ( dx) / x2 dE = k (dx / x2) The charge density is = Q / (2 a) Remember, our equation for the electric field is for the magnitude of the electric field. Consider a little piece of charge dq as sketched in the diagram. Because that charge dq is there, there is an electric field dE at point P in the direction shown. The component dEx of that electric field along the direction of the axis perpendicular to the plane of the ring is dEx = dE cos dEx = dE (x/r) What about other geometries? dEx = [k dq/r2] (x/r) dEx = [k dq/r3] x Find the electric field due to a ring of charge: A ring of radius a has a uniform charge density with a total charge Q. Calculate the electric field along the axis of the ring at a point P, a distance x from the center of the ring. dEx = [k x dq/r3] dEx = [k x/r3] dq Notice that, with this geometry, once the radius of the ring a is specified and the position x, that fully specifies r. r and x do not change as we integrate over dq. important. Don't start writing equations before you have made good, clear, complete diagrams! LECTURE NO.18 r = SQRT(a2 + x2) r3 = (a2 + x2)3/2 Electric Flux Density The Electric Flux Density (D) is related to the Electric Field (E) by: 1/r3 = 1/(a2 + x2)3/2 In the aboveequation , is the permittivity of the medium (material) where we a If you recall that the Electric Field is equal to the force per unit charge Then the Electric Flux Density is: Remember, x and a are not variables. What about the component of E that is perpendicular to this direction? By symmetry that component is zero. From the diagram, you can see that for each element of charge dq, there is another element of charge dq on the opposite side of the ring that causes an electric field that just cancels the first one -- that is, their components perpendicular to the axis of symmetry just cancel. Notice that their components along the axis do not cancel for they lie in the same direction. Diagrams are very From the above equation the Electric Flux Density is very similar to the Electric F the material in which we are measuring (that is, it does not depend on the permitti field is a vector field, which means that at every point in space it has a magnitude The Electric Flux Density has units of Coulombs per meter squared [C/m^2]. LECTURE NO.19 Gauss's law For Gauss's theorem, a mathematical theorem relevant to all of these laws, Divergence theorem. In physics, Gauss's law, also known as Gauss's flux theorem, is a law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field. Qualitative description of the law In words, Gauss's law states that: Equation involving E field Gauss's law can be stated using either the electric field E or the electric displacement field D. This section shows some of the forms with E; the form with D is below, as are other forms with E. Integral form Gauss's law may be expressed as: The net electric flux through any closed surface is equal to 1⁄ε times the net electric charge enclosed within that closed surface. Gauss's law has a close mathematical similarity with a number of laws in other areas of physics, such as Gauss's law for magnetism and Gauss's law for gravity. In fact, any "inverse-square law" can be formulated in a way similar to Gauss's law: For example, Gauss's law itself is essentially equivalent to the inverse-square Coulomb's law, and Gauss's law for gravity is essentially equivalent to the inverse-square Newton's law of gravity. Gauss's law is something of an electrical analogue of Ampère's law, which deals with magnetism. The law can be expressed mathematically using vector calculus in integral form and differential form, both are equivalent since they are related by the divergence theorem, also called Gauss's theorem. Each of these forms in turn can also be expressed two ways: In terms of a relation between the electric field E and the total electric charge, or in terms of the electric displacement field D and the free electric charge. where ΦE is the electric flux through a closed surface S enclosing any volume V, Q is the total charge enclosed within S, and ε0 is the electric constant. The electric flux ΦE is defined as a surface integral of the electric field: where E is the electric field, dA is a vector representing an infinitesimal element of area, and · represents the dot product of two vectors. Since the flux is defined as an integral of the electric field, this expression of Gauss's law is called the integral form. Applying the integral form If the electric field is known everywhere, Gauss's law makes it quite easy, in principle, to find the distribution of electric charge: The charge in any given region can be deduced by integrating the electric field to find the flux. However, much more often, it is the reverse problem that needs to be solved: The electric charge distribution is known, and the electric field needs to be computed. This is much more difficult, since if you know the total flux through a given surface that gives almost no information about the electric field, which (for all you know) could go in and out of the surface in arbitrarily complicated patterns. An exception is if there is some symmetry in the situation, which mandates that the electric field passes through the surface in a uniform way. Then, if the total flux is known, the field itself can be deduced at every point. Common examples of symmetries which lend themselves to Gauss's law include cylindrical symmetry, planar symmetry, and spherical symmetry. equivalent, by the divergence theorem. Here is the argument more specifically. The integral form of Gauss's law is: for any closed surface S containing charge Q. By the divergence theorem, this equation is equivalent to: for any volume V containing charge Q. By the relation between charge and charge density, this equation is equivalent to: Differential form By the divergence theorem Gauss's law can alternatively be written in the differential form: where ∇ · E is the divergence of the electric field, ε0 is the electric constant, and ρ is the total electric charge density. Equivalence of integral and differential forms The integral and differential forms are mathematically for any volume V. In order for this equation to be simultaneously true for every possible volume V, it is necessary (and sufficient) for the integrands to be equal everywhere. Therefore, this equation is equivalent to: Thus the integral and differential forms are equivalent. Equation involving D field where ΦD is the D-field flux through a surface S which encloses a volume V, and Qfree is the free charge contained in V. The flux ΦD is defined analogously to the flux ΦE of the electric field E through S: Free, bound, and total charge The electric charge that arises in the simplest textbook situations would be classified as "free charge"—for example, the charge which is transferred in static electricity, or the charge on a capacitor plate. In contrast, "bound charge" arises only in the context of dielectric (polarizable) materials. (All materials are polarizable to some extent.) When such materials are placed in an external electric field, the electrons remain bound to their respective atoms, but shift a microscopic distance in response to the field, so that they're more on one side of the atom than the other. All these microscopic displacements add up to give a macroscopic net charge distribution, and this constitutes the "bound charge". Although microscopically, all charge is fundamentally the same, there are often practical reasons for wanting to treat bound charge differently from free charge. The result is that the more "fundamental" Gauss's law, in terms of E (above), is sometimes put into the equivalent form below, which is in terms of D and the free charge only. Integral form Differential form The differential form of Gauss's law, involving free charge only, states: where ∇ · D is the divergence of the electric displacement field, and ρfree is the free electric charge density. Equation for linear materials In homogeneous, isotropic, nondispersive, linear materials, there is a simple relationship between E and D: where ε is the permittivity of the material. For the case of vacuum (aka free space), ε = ε0. Under these circumstances, Gauss's law modifies to This formulation of Gauss's law states the total charge form: for the integral form, and with respect to r, and use the known theorem for the differential form. Gauss's law can be derived from Coulomb's law. Coulomb's law states that the electric field due to a stationary point charge is: where δ(r) is the Dirac delta function, the result is Using the "sifting property" of the Dirac delta function, we arrive at where er is the radial unit vector, r is the radius, |r|, is the electric constant, q is the charge of the particle, which is assumed to be located at the origin. Using the expression from Coulomb's law, we get the total field at r by using an integral to sum the field at r due to the infinitesimal charge at each other point s in space, to give where is the charge density. If we take the divergence of both sides of this equation which is the differential form of Gauss's law, as desired. Deriving Coulomb's law from Gauss's law Strictly speaking, Coulomb's law cannot be derived from Gauss's law alone, since Gauss's law does not give any information regarding the curl of E (see Helmholtz decomposition and Faraday's law). However, Coulomb's law can be proven from Gauss's law if it is assumed, in addition, that the electric field from a point charge is spherically-symmetric (this assumption, like Coulomb's law itself, is exactly true if the charge is stationary, and approximately true if the charge is in motion). charge of magnitude q as shown below in the figure. Taking S in the integral form of Gauss's law to be a spherical surface of radius r, centered at the point charge Q, we have By the assumption of spherical symmetry, the integrand is a constant which can be taken out of the integral. The result is where is a unit vector pointing radially away from the charge. Again by spherical symmetry, E points in the radial direction, and so we get which is essentially equivalent to Coulomb's law. Thus the inverse-square law dependence of the electric field in Coulomb's law follows from Gauss's law. Application of gauss law (A) Derivation of Coulumb's Law Coulumb's law can be derived from Gauss's law. Consider electric field of a single isolated positive Field of a positive charge is in radially outward direction everywhere and magnitude of electric field intensity is same for all points at a distance r from the charge. We can assume Gaussian surface to be a sphere of radius r enclosing the charge q. From Gauss's law since E is constant at all points on the surface therefore, We can assume Gaussian surface to be a right circular cylinder of radius r and length l with its ends perpandicular to the wire as shown below in the figure. λ is the charge per unit length on the wire. Direction of E is perpandicular to the wire and components of E normal to end faces of cylinder makes no contribution to electric flux. Thus from Gauss's law Now consider left hand side of Gauss's law surface area of the sphere is A=4πr2 thus, Now force acting on point charge q' at distance r from point charge q is This is nothing but the mathematical statement of Coulumb's law. (B) Electric field due to line charge Consider a long thin uniformly charged wire and we have to find the electric field intensity due to the wire at any point at perpandicular distance from the wire. If the wire is very long and we are at point far away from both its ends then field lines outside the wire are radial and would lie on a plane perpandicular to the wire. Electric field intensity have same magnitude at all points which are at same distance from the line charge. Since at all points on the curved surface E is constant. Surface area of cylinder of radius r and length l is A=2πrl therefore, Charge enclosed in cylinder is q=linear charge density x length l of cylinder, or, q=λl From Gauss's law Thus electric field intensity of a long positively charged wire does not depends on length of the wire but on the radial distance r of points from the wire. LECTURE NO.19 .