Supplement 1.2: Solving Maxwell's Equations for Electromagnetic Waves (2/3)
Solving the wave equation
We derived the wave equations which characterise electromagnetic fields in vacuum. They combine the second spatial and temporal derivatives of the electric and magnetic field:
We examine the electric field vector of the wave at a position in space. The wave is assumed to propagate in a direction given by the unit vector . The wave equation for the electric field is then solved by the following equation:
where is a constant vector having the same orientation as and f is a second differentiable function.
With the first Maxwell equation for the divergence of the electric field it follows:
and therefore:
The scalar product of two vectors vanishes if the vectors are orthogonal to each other. Hence, and also are orthogonal to the direction the wave travels.
In the third Maxwell equation
the vector is orthogonal to . Since the time derivative does not change the orientation of , it is evident that and are orthogonal to each other, and both are orthogonal to the direction the wave travels: electromagnetic waves are transverse waves.
Plane monochromatic waves
In chapter 1, section electromagnetic waves on page 2, the E-field and the B-field of a plane monochromatic wave travelling into direction x (ignoring the vector character of and ) is written as:
An alternative formulation of these equations uses
- the circular frequency ω, with , and
- the wave number k, with .
With these quantities, the equations above become:
We will use this form further-on in the supplements.