Introduction To Electromagnetism: Vector Analysis

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 9

Introduction to Electromagnetism

Vector Analysis
(2-1, 2-2, 2-3)

Yoonchan Jeong
School of Electrical Engineering, Seoul National University
Tel: +82 (0)2 880 1623, Fax: +82 (0)2 873 9953
Email: [email protected]
Introduction
Quantities in electromagnetics (from a mathematical viewpoint)?
• Scalar: Completely specified by its magnitude (positive or negative,
together with its unit)
• Vector: Required both a magnitude and a direction to specify

How do we specify the direction of a vector?


• In a three-dimensional space, three numbers are needed.
• These numbers depend on the choice of a coordinate system:
e.g.) Cartesian coordinates, cylindrical coordinates, spherical coordinates, etc.

However, physical laws and theorems certainly must hold irrespective of the
coordinate system:
• The general expressions of the laws of electromagnetism do not
require the specification of a coordinate system
• A particular coordinate system is chosen only when a problem of
a given geometry is analyzed.

2
What we are going to learn on vector analysis
1. Vector algebra:
Addition, subtraction and multiplication of vectors

2. Orthogonal coordinate systems:


Cartesian, cylindrical, and spherical coordinates

3. Vector calculus:
Differentiation and integration of vectors;
Line, surface, and volume integrals;
“del” operator;
Gradient, divergence, and curl operations

A deficiency in vector analysis in the study of electromagnetics is similar to


a deficiency in algebra and calculus in the study of physics.

“It is obvious that these deficiencies cannot yield fruitful outcomes!”

3
Vector: Magnitude and Direction
Magnitude and direction of a vector A:
A = aAA

Magnitude: A = A
Graphical representation of vector A
A A D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

Dimensionless unit vector: A


a = =
A A
Equality:
Two vectors are equal if they have the same magnitude and
the same direction.

4
Vector Addition and Subtraction
Vector addition: C = A + B
1. By the parallelogram rule
2. By the head-to-tail rule
Vector addition
Rules for vector addition: D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

Commutative law: A + B = B + A
Associative law: A + (B + C) = ( A + B) + C

Vector subtraction: C = A − B = A + (−B)


− B : Negative of vector B
Having the same magnitude but with
an opposite direction w.r.t. B
− B = (−a B ) B
Vector subtraction
D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

Scalar multiplication: kA = (kA)a A 5


Scalar or Dot Product
Scalar or dot product of two vectors A and B :
A ⋅ B ≡ AB cos θ AB Dot product
D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

where θ AB is the smaller angle between A and B

Note: 1. Magnitude: Less than or equal to the product of their magnitudes


2. Either a positive or a negative quantity, depending on θ AB
3. Equal to the product of the magnitude of one vector and
the projection of the other upon the first one
4. Zero when the vectors are perpendicular to each other
Rules for dot product:
A ⋅ A = A2 or A = A ⋅ A
Commutative law: A ⋅ B = B ⋅ A
Distributive law: A ⋅ (B + C) = A ⋅ B + A ⋅ C Proof? HW

6
Vector or Cross Product
Vector or cross product of two vectors A and B :
A × B ≡ AB sin θ AB a n
where a n is perpendicular to the plane containing A and B ;
its direction follows that of the thumb of the right hand when
the fingers rotate from A to B through the angle θ AB
(the right-hand rule)

Cross product
Rules for cross product:
D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

Not commutative: B × A = − A × B
Distributive law: A × (B + C) = A × B + A × C Proof? HW
Not associative: A × (B × C) ≠ ( A × B) × C
7
Product of Three Vectors
Scalar triple product:
A ⋅ (B × C) = B ⋅ (C × A) = C ⋅ ( A × B)
Cyclic permutation

Scalar triple product


Vector triple product: D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

A × (B × C) = B( A ⋅ C) − C( A ⋅ B)
“back-cab” rule

8
A × (B × C) = B( A ⋅ C) − C( A ⋅ B)
Vector Triple Product
Proof:
Let A = A // + A ⊥ (w.r.t. B − C plane)
A × (B × C) = ( A // + A ⊥ ) × (B × C)
Vector triple product
= A // × (B × C) ≡ D D. K. Cheng, Field and Wave Electromagnetics, 2nd ed., Addison-Wesley, 1989.

Note that A // , B & C


D = D ⋅ a D = A// BC sin(θ1 − θ 2 ) are on the same plane.
= A// BC (sin θ1 cos θ 2 − cos θ1 sin θ 2 )
= ( B sin θ1 )( A// C cos θ 2 ) − (C sin θ 2 )( A// B cos θ1 )
= [B( A // ⋅ C) − C( A // ⋅ B)] ⋅ a D ?
Let B( A // ⋅ C) − C( A // ⋅ B) = D + kA //
→ A // ⋅ [B( A // ⋅ C) − C( A // ⋅ B)] = A // ⋅ (D + kA // )
→ ( A // ⋅ B)( A // ⋅ C) − ( A // ⋅ C)( A // ⋅ B) = A // ⋅ D + kA//2 = 0
← A // ⋅ C = A ⋅ C, A // ⋅ B = A ⋅ B →k =0
∴ A × (B × C) = B( A ⋅ C) − C( A ⋅ B) 9

You might also like