In physics, electromagnetic radiation (EM radiation or EMR) refers to the waves (or their quanta, photons) of the electromagnetic field, propagating through space, carrying electromagnetic radiant energy. It includes radio waves, microwaves, infrared, (visible) light, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays. All of these waves form part of the electromagnetic spectrum.Classically, electromagnetic radiation consists of electromagnetic waves, which are synchronized oscillations of electric and magnetic fields. Electromagnetic radiation or electromagnetic waves are created due to periodic change of electric or magnetic field. Depending on how this periodic change occurs and the power generated, different wavelengths of electromagnetic spectrum are produced. In a vacuum, electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light, commonly denoted c. In homogeneous, isotropic media, the oscillations of the two fields are perpendicular to each other and perpendicular to the direction of energy and wave propagation, forming a transverse wave. The wavefront of electromagnetic waves emitted from a point source (such as a light bulb) is a sphere. The position of an electromagnetic wave within the electromagnetic spectrum can be characterized by either its frequency of oscillation or its wavelength. Electromagnetic waves of different frequency are called by different names since they have different sources and effects on matter. In order of increasing frequency and decreasing wavelength these are: radio waves, microwaves, infrared radiation, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays and gamma rays.Electromagnetic waves are emitted by electrically charged particles undergoing acceleration, and these waves can subsequently interact with other charged particles, exerting force on them. EM waves carry energy, momentum and angular momentum away from their source particle and can impart those quantities to matter with which they interact. Electromagnetic radiation is associated with those EM waves that are free to propagate themselves ("radiate") without the continuing influence of the moving charges that produced them, because they have achieved sufficient distance from those charges. Thus, EMR is sometimes referred to as the far field. In this language, the near field refers to EM fields near the charges and current that directly produced them, specifically electromagnetic induction and electrostatic induction phenomena.
In quantum mechanics, an alternate way of viewing EMR is that it consists of photons, uncharged elementary particles with zero rest mass which are the quanta of the electromagnetic field, responsible for all electromagnetic interactions. Quantum electrodynamics is the theory of how EMR interacts with matter on an atomic level. Quantum effects provide additional sources of EMR, such as the transition of electrons to lower energy levels in an atom and black-body radiation. The energy of an individual photon is quantized and is greater for photons of higher frequency. This relationship is given by Planck's equation E = hf, where E is the energy per photon, f is the frequency of the photon, and h is Planck's constant. A single gamma ray photon, for example, might carry ~100,000 times the energy of a single photon of visible light.
The effects of EMR upon chemical compounds and biological organisms depend both upon the radiation's power and its frequency. EMR of visible or lower frequencies (i.e., visible light, infrared, microwaves, and radio waves) is called non-ionizing radiation, because its photons do not individually have enough energy to ionize atoms or molecules or break chemical bonds. The effects of these radiations on chemical systems and living tissue are caused primarily by heating effects from the combined energy transfer of many photons. In contrast, high frequency ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma rays are called ionizing radiation, since individual photons of such high frequency have enough energy to ionize molecules or break chemical bonds. These radiations have the ability to cause chemical reactions and damage living cells beyond that resulting from simple heating, and can be a health hazard.
I understand that em radiation (light) will be produced if you cause a charge to oscillate. Does this happen at all frequencies? If I charged a comb by running it through my hair and then shake it up and down, am I sending out light waves?
Have viewed PF, first time post (have searched for this question on forum):
The energy of EM radiation can be described by the Poynting vector S = E x B (insert conversion factor for cgs, MKS, etc).
For a traveling EM wave, what happens to the instantaneous value of S when E and B are...
It is my understanding that electromagnetic radiation is absorbed by an electron and then emitted at another angle. So why does particle size affect scattering when the phenomenon involves electrons? Also, why does the size of the wavelength of the light relative to the diameter of the particle...
Homework Statement
A particle of mass m and charge q is attached to a spring with force constant k, hanging from the ceiling. Its equilibrium position is a distance h above the floor. It is pulled down a distance d below equilibrium and released, at time t = 0;
Under the usual assumptions...
I was always told that EM radiation is a far field effect. Does this mean that the light emitted from the accelerating electron is not right next to the electron but a little further out.
And also how do you calculate the frequency of the light coming off. When I looked through Griffiths...
If photons "carry" visible light, and light is just a specific frequency of EM radiation... who carries radio waves?
[PLAIN]http://www.antonine-education.co.uk/physics_gcse/Unit_1/Topic_5/em_spectrum.jpg
And can an EM radiation at specific frequency be changed to a different frequency? I...
Organisms radiation EM energy. I am aware of the brain and nervous system as a source (because of electrical currents, etc) and that we have a lot of IR radiation.
Is the majority of the energy due to blackbody radiation, a by-product of chemical reactions, or something else?
Since a changing current creates a magnetic field, and if there's a wire near by, the magnetic field will induce a current in that wire. What is needed / what does it take to turn that magnetic field into EM radiation such as a radio wave?
Or is it purely just the frequency of the current, so...
Aight, so I have this problem where I think about something and then I understand it, but then instead of stopping thinking and understanding it, I keep thinking and stop understanding it.
Unfortunately then my poor brain is so confruzed that I am unable to backtrack to understanding, and I...
Hello everyone,
I'm a bit confused about electric dipole radiation. In my E&M book "Intro to Electrodynamics" by David Griffiths, it states that the electric field from an oscillating dipole is in theta hat direction. Mathematically I have the proof as to why in my book, but conceptually I'm...
I see everywhere the explanation that electromagnetic radiation self-propagates this way: a changing magnetic field induces a changing electric field, which in turn induces a changing magnetic field and so on and so on.
I do not understand that. I do not have a problem with saying (it is a...
Both Wikipedia and my educators called electromagnetic radiation a self propagating wave.
I would suggest that the word self be removed from wikipedia at least. There is no self in a wave. Even the word "coupled" or "causally related" are risky WRT the grav and mag components as I don't...
Goodday.
In my introductory course of Physics, we use Serway. I've typed over a little piece from the book that I find quite vague. It is giving an example of (after deducing the plane wave EM equations) EM radiation. It uses the following antenna:
The positive and negative sides are...
I've read that even before the 20th century physicists realized that light carries momentum, and that - although experiment is the ultimate arbiter in science - one can arrive at this conclusion by studying Maxwell's equations alone. If this is the case, could someone give me an outline of the...
Homework Statement
http://i258.photobucket.com/albums/hh258/Plutoniummatt/Untitled-1-2.jpg
Homework Equations
Pwr Ref Coeff:
(Z'-Z)/(Z'+Z) all squared
I maybe made a mistake but i can't spot it. And its bugging me
I did square the whole thing afterward for the power...but...
As grotesque as the title may appear to suggest, I basically want to understand just that. Why is it that EM radiation of each group of wavelengths (visible, IR, UV etc.) manages to penetrate materials with varying ease. From what I've seen so far - and I haven't studied this directly, I'm just...
Hello everyone! Let me first say how cool it is that this forum exists, I wish I'd thought of coming here years ago.
I am trying to understand how EM radiation works. From the high school physics that I've learned I have been under the impression that reflection was due to electrical...
Homework Statement
Two incoherent EM waves of intensities 10I0 and 14I0 travel in the same direction in the same region of space. What is the intensity of EM radiation in this region?
Homework Equations
I = I1+I2 + 2√(I1I2) or
I = I1+I2 - 2√(I1I2)
The Attempt at a Solution
I...
Hello,
The city added a new electric transformation station near my house and has recently closed down a kindergarten adjacent to it due to 'radiation safety' reasons. My house is two doors down and my mother is concerned that radiation from the station might be hazardous to her health. She...
Homework Statement
A certain star is 13 million light-years from Earth. The intensity of the light that reaches Earth from the star is 6 10-21 W/m2. At what rate does the star radiate EM energy?
Homework Equations
i know you have to convert lightyears to m. (1.23e17m) multiply this...
Anybody knows if there is a rule for EM radiation cross over materials ?
The wavelenght in comparison the size (or structure) of molecule is determinant ?
Ex. why infrared pass through the concrete but not metalics ?
Thank you.
Hello,
Is there any empirical evidence that electromagnetic radiation
produces gravitational fields? I understand that as a form of energy
it is expected to induce a spacetime curvature, but has this
prediction of GR actually been tested? Is it at all subject to any
controversy?
Thanks,
Armin
What are the ways (both natural and artificial) in which em radiation is generated?
Here is one of the methods: We take a point charge (or more practically a charged sphere with uniform charge distribution) such that we can voluntarily fluctuate the amount of charge on it. We fluctuate the...
There is a EM radiation of frequency suppose x Hz.Let it has to travel a distance of y m.Now what's the time required for the radiation to travel the distance?The question seems to be very easy, but my confusion is in how can the frequency,distance,speed and time can be related? Can someone give...
OK so I'm familiar with the idea that EM radiation propagates through space in straight lines at a uniform speed, that of light.
The idea that light moves in waves, that each wavelength carries a uniform energy and that the wavelength differs yet because the same speed is maintained each...
Helpppp please. EM Radiation doesn't make sense to me
Hi. I don't see how you would get the answers to these questions.
1) A beam of light is shone on two sheets of paper, one of which is perfectly absorbing black and the other perfectly reflecting white. If the radiation pressure on the...
As I've been studying up on EM radiation, I've come to the conclusion that radio and light waves are not the same thing. Radio seems to be nothing other than a continuously flipping magnetic field (source: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/radio/radiowaves.html). In this way, there do not seem...
I'm bit confused about using terms temporal coherence and transverse/longitudinal spatial coherence when speaking about electro-magnetic radiation.
I have understood that temporal coherence basically means how monochromatic light is. But I don't understand why temporal coherence is related...
Hi All,
I've been recently reading a thread, and a question keeps popping up there. Its not very difficult, it just requires a simple yes or no answer...in a single photon emission, is the energy of the photon distributed evenly on the sphere r=ct, or does this sphere represent the...
Maybe the wrong word but can you get electromagnetic radiation in any frequency or is there a "quantum" frequency for which all other frequencies are some integer multiple?
Related question - is there an absolute low and high frequency?
This should be possible with table top experiments rather than LHC scale experiments:abstract:
Electromagnetic radiation decays with 1/r in three dimensional
space, while the non radiating Coulomb field decays faster with 1/r^2.
The general expressions for any dimension are 1/r^{(d-1)/2} for...
Electromagnetic wave are said to travel with velocity c, in vacuum and are also said to be a transverse wave. But consider this:
Let a positive charge Q be at point P of a three dimensional space.
Let this charge, at time t=0, begin an uniform circular motion with angular velocity OMEGA =...
hi , got 2 question about radiation:
1. Microwaves , radiowaves ,gamma rays and visible light - which one cannot detected by film?
2. Gamma rays , beta rays ,neutrons and alphas - which one has the shortest range in tissue ?( assume equal enegy)
thanks
hi guys, having a bit of trouble answering this physics question. Wondering if any of the experts can help me out.
Can the electromagnetic radiation produced by a hot gas of hydrogen atoms be exactly of one frequency?
They say also that the atoms make a transition from state n=2 to n=1 and...
hi guys, having a bit of trouble answering this physics question. Wondering if any of the experts can help me out.
Can the electromagnetic radiation produced by a hot gas of hydrogen atoms be exactly of one frequency?
not sure if this is true or not. They say also that the atoms make a...
Can the electromagnetic radiation produced by a hot gas of hydrogen atoms be exactly of one frequency? Assume that all of the atoms undergo a transition from the state n=2 to n=1. Note that the atoms in the gas are moving.