Electric field drop exponentially

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The discussion centers on the conditions under which an electric field can drop exponentially in free space. It is noted that while exponential decay is unlikely in free space, it can occur across surfaces where total internal reflection leads to evanescent waves. Additionally, near-field effects in electromagnetism, such as guided modes in waveguides and diffraction off sub-wavelength obstacles, can produce exponentially decaying fields. In electrostatics, the possibility of achieving exponential decay through specific charge configurations or by surrounding a point charge with a dielectric of varying permittivity is explored. Ultimately, it is concluded that a purely exponential electric field cannot exist in free space without charge density.
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Is there any situation where the electric field drop exponentially in free space? thanks
 
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in free space? probably not...
but across a surface where total internal reflection occurs, some evanescent wave is transmitted, this wave is exponentially suppressed.
 
For electromagnetism, any near field amplitude component decays exponentially with distance.

For electrostatics, I'm not sure. There may be a way to construct a set of charges such that the multipole expansion looks like the series expansion for an exponential function, but I have never seen one.
 
Evanescent (exponentially decaying fields) can be produced by;

- Total internal reflection.
- Guided modes in a waveguide.
- An EM diffracting off a sub-wavelength aperture or obstacle (Near-field).
- Exciting a charged surface at resonance (surface plasmons).

Claude.
 
> For electrostatics, I'm not sure. There may be a way to construct a set of charges such that the multipole expansion looks like the series expansion for an exponential function

Or put a dielectric with spatially varying dielectric constant around a point charge in a homocentric manner. This would eliminate the inverse square and introduce the exponential. Here it is:

E = 1/4πε(r) Q / r^2

if ε(r) = a * exp(br) / r^2

then you've got a decaying exponential effect.

E = E0 * exp(-br)
 
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a field whose magnitude decays exponentially (either in 1-D or radially from some central point) has a non-zero divergence everywhere. so if by "free space" you mean no charge density, then I don't think such a field could exist anywhere in free space.
 
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