Introduction To Electromagnetism: Vector Analysis
Introduction To Electromagnetism: Vector Analysis
Introduction To Electromagnetism: Vector Analysis
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
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
3. Vector calculus:
Differentiation and integration of vectors;
Line, surface, and volume integrals;
“del” operator;
Gradient, divergence, and curl operations
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.
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
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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
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Product of Three Vectors
Scalar triple product:
A ⋅ (B × C) = B ⋅ (C × A) = C ⋅ ( A × B)
Cyclic permutation
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.