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Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics Chapter 2 - Vector Analysis Chapter Objectives Operations of vector algebra Dot product of two vectors Differential functions in vector calculus Divergence of a vector field Divergence theorem The curl of a vector field Stokes’s theorem Chapter Outline 2-1) 2-2) 2-3) 2-4) Basic Laws of Vector Algebra Orthogonal Coordinate Systems Transformations between Coordinate Systems Gradient of a Scalar Field 2-5) Divergence of a Vector Field 2-6) Curl of a Vector Field 2-7) Laplacian Operator 2-1 Basic Laws of Vector Algebra • Vector A has magnitude A = |A| to the direction of propagation. • Vector A shown may be represented as A xˆAx yˆAy zˆAz 2-1.1 Equality of Two Vectors • A and B are equal when they have equal magnitudes and identical unit vectors. 2-1.2 Vector Addition and Subtraction • For addition and subtraction of A and B, D A B xˆ A B yˆ A B zˆ A C A B xˆ Ax Bx yˆ Ay B y zˆ Az Bz x x y y z Bz 2-1.3 Position and Distance Vectors • Position vector is the vector from the origin to point. R12 P1P2 R2 R1 2-1.4 Vector Multiplication • 3 different types of product in vector calculus: 1. Simple Product with a scalar 2. Scalar or Dot Product A B AB cos AB where θAB = angle between A and B +ve -ve 2-1.4 Vector Multiplication 3. Vector or Cross Product A B n̂AB sin AB • Cartesian coordinate system relations: xˆ xˆ yˆ yˆ zˆ zˆ 0 • In summary, xˆ A B Ax yˆ Ay zˆ Az Bx By Bz 2-1.5 Scalar and Vector Triple Products • A scalar triple product is A B C B C A C A B • A vector triple product is A B C BA C CA B known as the “bac-cab” rule. Example 2.2 Vector Triple Product Given A x̂ ŷ ẑ2 , B ŷ ẑ , and C x̂2 ẑ3 , find (A× B)× C and compare it with A× (B× C). Solution x̂ ŷ ẑ A B 1 1 2 x̂3 ŷ ẑ 0 1 1 x̂ ŷ ẑ A B C 3 1 1 x̂3 ŷ7 ẑ2 2 0 3 A similar procedure gives A B C x̂2 ŷ4 ẑ 2-2 Orthogonal Coordinate Systems • Orthogonal coordinate system has coordinates that are mutually perpendicular. 2-2.1 Cartesian Coordinates • Differential length in Cartesian coordinates is a vector defined as dl xˆdx yˆ dy zˆdz 2-2.2 Cylindrical Coordinates • Base unit vectors obey right-hand cyclic relations. rˆ ˆ zˆ, • ˆ zˆ rˆ, zˆ rˆ ˆ Differential areas and volume in cylindrical coordinates are shown. Example 2.4 Cylindrical Area Find the area of a cylindrical surface described by r = 5, 30° ≤ Ф ≤ 60°, and 0 ≤ z ≤ 3 Solution For a surface element with constant r, the surface area is 60 5 S r d dz 5 / 6 z 0 2 30 z 0 3 /3 3 2-2.3 Spherical Coordinates • Base unit vectors obey right-hand cyclic relations. Rˆ ˆ ˆ, ˆ ˆ Rˆ , ˆ Rˆ ˆ where R = range coordinate sphere radius Θ = measured from the positive z-axis Example 2.6 Charge in a Sphere A sphere of radius 2 cm contains a volume charge density ρv given by C/m v 4 cos 2 3 Find the total charge Q contained in the sphere. Solution Q v dv v 2 R 4 3 0 0 3 2 2102 4 cos R 2 2 sin dRd d 0 0 R 0 2102 0 2 sin cos 2 dd 32 cos 6 d 44.68 C 10 3 3 0 0 3 2-3 Transformations between Coordinate Systems Cartesian to Cylindrical Transformations • Relationships between (x, y, z) and (r, φ, z) are shown. • Relevant vectors are defined as rˆ xˆ cos yˆ sin ˆ xˆ sin yˆ cos xˆ rˆ cos ˆ sin , yˆ rˆ sin ˆ cos 2-3 Transformations between Coordinate Systems Cartesian to Spherical Transformations • Relationships between (x, y, z) and (r, θ, Φ) are shown. • Relevant vectors are defined as Rˆ xˆ sin cos yˆ sin sin zˆ cos ˆ xˆ cos cos yˆ cos sin zˆ sin ˆ xˆ sin yˆ cos xˆ Rˆ sin cos ˆ cos cos ˆ sin , yˆ Rˆ sin sin ˆ cos sin ˆ cos , zˆ Rˆ cos ˆ sin Example 2.8 Cartesian to Spherical Transformation Express vector A x̂x y ŷ y z ẑz in spherical coordinates. Solution Using the transformation relation, AR Ax sin cos Ay sin sin Az cos x y sin cos y x sin sin z cos Using the expressions for x, y, and z, AR R sin 2 cos 2 sin 2 R cos 2 R sin 2 R cos 2 R Solution 2.8 Cartesian to Spherical Transformation Similarly, A x y cos cos y x cos sin z sin A x y sin y x cos Following the procedure, we have A 0 A R sin Hence, A R̂AR θ̂A φ̂A R̂R φ̂R sin 2-3 Transformations between Coordinate Systems Distance between Two Points • Distance d between 2 points is d R12 x2 x1 y2 y1 z2 z1 • 2 2 2 1 2 Converting to cylindrical equivalents. r d r2 cos 2 r1 cos 1 r2 sin 2 r1 sin 1 z2 z1 2 2 • 2 2 r 2r1r2 2 1 z2 z1 2 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 Converting to spherical equivalents. d R R 2R1R2 cos 2 cos 1 sin 1 sin 2 cos2 1 2 2 2 1 1 2 2-4 Gradient of a Scalar Field • • Differential distance vector dl is dl xˆdx yˆdy zˆdz . Vector that change position dl is gradient of T, or grad. T T T T grad T xˆ yˆ zˆ x y z • The symbol ∇ is called the del or gradient operator. xˆ yˆ zˆ (Cartesian ) x y z 2-4 Gradient of a Scalar Field • • Gradient operator needs dl aˆl dl to be scalar quantity. dT Directional derivative of T is given by dl T aˆl 2-4.1 Gradient Operator in Cylindrical and Spherical Coordinates • Gradient operator in cylindrical and spherical coordinates is defined as rˆ ˆ1 zˆ (cylindric al) r r z 1 ˆ 1 ˆ ˆ R (spherical ) R R R sin Example 2.9 Directional Derivative 2 2 T x y z along the Find the directional derivative of direction xˆ 2 yˆ 3 zˆ 2 and evaluate it at (1,−1, 2). Solution Gradient of T : T xˆ yˆ zˆ x 2 y 2 z xˆ 2 x yˆ 2 yz zˆy 2 y z x We denote l as the given direction, Unit vector is and dT dl aˆl I xˆ 2 yˆ 3 zˆ 2 I xˆ 2 yˆ 3 zˆ 2 xˆ 2 yˆ 3 zˆ 2 2 2 2 I 17 2 3 2 4 x 6 yz 2 y 2 T aˆl 17 1, 1, 2 1, 1, 2 10 17 2-5 Divergence of a Vector Field • Total flux of the electric field E due to q is Total Flux E ds S • Flux lines of a vector field E is Ex E y Ez E div E x y z 2-5.1 Divergence Theorem • The divergence theorem is defined as Edv E ds v • (divergenc e theorem) S ∇ ·E stands for the divergence of vector E. Example 2.11 Calculating the Divergence Determine the divergence of each of the following vector fields and then evaluate it at the indicated point: a E x̂3x 2 ŷ2 z ẑx 2 z at 2,-2,0 b E R̂ a3 cos / R 2 ˆa3 sin / R 2 at a / 2,0, Solution E x E y E z a E 6x 0 x2 x2 6x x y z Thus E 2, 2, 0 16 3 E 1 1 1 2 a cos b E 2 E sin R 2 ER R R R sin R sin R3 Thus, E a / 2,0, 16 2-6 Curl of a Vector Field • Circulation is zero for uniform field and not zero for azimuthal field. • The curl of a vector field B is defined as 1 B curl B lim n̂ B dl s 0 s C max 2-6.1 Vector Identities Involving the Curl • Vector identities: (1) ∇ × (A + B) = ∇× A+∇× B, (2) ∇ ·(∇ × A) = 0 for any vector A, (3) ∇ × (∇V ) = 0 for any scalar function V. 2-6.2 Stokes’s Theorem • Stokes’s theorem converts surface into line integral. B ds B dl C S (Stoke' s theorem) Example 2.12 Verification of Stokes’s Theorem A vector field is given by B ẑ cos / r . Verify Stokes’s theorem for a segment of a cylindrical surface defined by r = 2, π/3 ≤ φ ≤ π/2, and 0 ≤ z ≤ 3, as shown. Solution Stokes’s theorem states that B ds B dl C S Left-hand side: Express in cylindrical coordinates 1 Bz B Br Bz 1 Br φ̂ B rˆ ẑ rB r z z r r z sin cos rˆ 2 φ̂ 2 r r Solution 2.12 Verification of Stokes’s Theorem The integral of ∇ × B over the specified surface S with r = 2 is 2 cos sin S B ds z0 3 r̂ r 2 φ̂ r 2 r̂rddz 3 3 2 sin 3 3 ddz r 2r 4 0 3 Right-hand side: Definition of field B on segments ab, bc, cd, and da is b B dl B C a ab c d a b c d dl Bbc dl Bcd dl Bda dl Solution 2.12 Verification of Stokes’s Theorem At different segments, Bab Bcd zˆcos / 2 0 where dl φ̂rdφ 0 Bbc ẑcos 2 / 2 where 2 Bda ẑcos / 3 / 2 ẑ 4 where dl ẑdz Thus, 1 3 1 CB dl d ẑ 4 ẑdz 3 4 dz 4 a 0 which is the same as the left hand side (proved!) 2-7 Laplacian Operator • Laplacian of V is denoted by ∇2V. 2 2 2 V V V 2 V V 2 2 2 x y z • For vector E given in Cartesian coordinates as E xˆE x yˆE y zˆE z the Laplacian of E is defined as 2 2 2 E 2 2 2 E xˆ 2 E x yˆ 2 E y zˆ 2 E z y z x 2 2-7 Laplacian Operator • • In Cartesian coordinates, the Laplacian of a vector is a vector whose components are equal to the Laplacians of the vector components. Through direct substitution, we can simplify it as 2 E E E