Questions tagged [electromagnetic-radiation]

Propagating solutions to Maxwell’s equations in classical electromagnetism and real photons in quantum electrodynamics. A superset of thermal-radiation.

When to Use this Tag

Use this tag to discuss electromagnetic waves. Since these arise either from or , you might want to include either of these two tags as well. For high-energy physics, look at . For electromagnetic waves originating from a black body, instead use ; the photo-electric effect also has its own tag .

Introduction

The defining property of an electromagnetic wave is its frequency $\nu$, which is related to the wavelength $\lambda$ of the wave by $c = \lambda \nu$. The electromagnetic wave propagates with the speed of light $c = \sqrt{\varepsilon_0 \mu_0 \varepsilon_r \mu_r}^{-1}$, where $\mu_r$ and $\varepsilon_r$ are material-dependent constants. The SI system defined $c_{\textrm{Vacuum}} \equiv 299\;792.458\textrm{ km/h}$. Visible light has a wavelength of $400\textrm{ nm} \lesssim \lambda \lesssim 800\textrm{ nm}$ in vacuum.

There are two main descriptions of electromagnetic waves: Classically, they can be described as propagating solutions to , that is, ‘normal‘ electromagnetic fields that change in time and position according to the electromagnetic wave equations.

However, the photoelectric effect can only be explained by quantised electromagnetic waves; waves that consist of particles carrying the energy of the wave. These particles are called photons, are massless and move at the speed of light. However, due to the energy of the electromagnetic field carried by them, a single photon has a non-zero momentum $p = h / \lambda$ and non-zero energy $E = h \nu$, with $h$ being Planck’s constant.

It is often convenient to define the angular frequency $\omega \equiv 2 \pi \nu$, the wave-number $k \equiv 2 \pi / \lambda$ and the reduced Planck’s constant $\hbar \equiv h / (2 \pi)$. We then have $p = \hbar k$ and $E = \hbar \omega$.

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If both radio waves and gamma rays can travel through walls

and they are on opposite ends of the electromagnetic spectrum, then why can't light travel through walls which is right in the middle of the spectrum? This question has already been asked here. However, I am not entirely satisfied by the answer…
morpheus
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If microwave ovens and WiFi both operate on the same frequency, why doesn't WiFi cook things?

If we ignore 5GHz WiFi, then both microwaves and WiFi create photons at ~2.4GHz but one of them will boil water in a few seconds but the other doesn't have any effect. So what's the difference? Is it simply the number of photons created? Is that…
Gregory Bell
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Can an LC oscillator be used to generate visible light?

The LC oscillator is most commonly used to generate radio waves for practical use and the frequency $\omega$ of the LC oscillator equals that of the electromagnetic wave so produced. So, can they in principle be used to emit visible light? The…
Gerard
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Why do electromagnetic waves have the magnetic and electric field intensities in the same phase?

My question is: in electromagnetic waves, if we consider the electric field as a sine function, the magnetic field will be also a sine function, but I am confused why that is this way. If I look at Maxwell's equation, the changing magnetic field…
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How can Wi-Fi bend through windows or penetrate walls?

Browsing on Wi-Fi, I can access stuff in my room even though my Wi-Fi has to go through a wall to reach me. But how is this possible, when the Wi-Fi wavelength is 12 cm, as cited here? AFAIK, for light, or any form of electromagnetic wave, to "bend"…
user4951
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Are the EM radiation categories objective or subjective?

We were taught at school that EM radiation can be categorised as radio waves, microwaves, infrared waves, visible light, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, and gamma rays, but how arbitrary is this categorisation? I understand that for humans the…
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Why don't electromagnetic waves interact with each other?

My exact question is that what refers to this phenomenon? I saw also Richards Feynman's video in that he talks about light and says that if we look at something those light waves that come from that thing are not disturbed from any other…
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Are the Properties of the EM Spectrum Fluid?

To put it simply. We group our EM waves into groups such as X-rays, microwaves, visible light etc. I was wondering, if the properties of say, x-rays, slowly change into the properties of say, gamma rays, or as soon as the wavelength is larger than…
yolo
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Why do electromagnetic waves become weaker with distance?

From what I know, In electromagnetic waves, the components electric field and magnetic field generate each other i.e. magnetic field generated from moving electric charge generates another electric field and which also generates another magnetic…
Ryan
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Why do isolated metals not radiate away all their energy as a result of all the collisions in the sea of electrons?

Presumably, as they don’t, it must be that the electron sea in the conduction band nevertheless has an individual atomic energy level for each and every “loose” electron. QM informs that in such a case, irrespective of the considerable amount of…
adlibber
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Has a free neutron ever been shown to absorb/emit/interact with a photon?

Protons only 'interact with' very high-energy photons, whether inside a nucleus or free, right? I'm assuming the same about neutrons.... Neutrons have a small magnetic moment and a slight electric 'moment' (dipole?), correct? They are sometimes…
Kurt Hikes
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Digging a Hole and Creating EM Radiation

This evening I was digging a hole for a post. Deep in the hole it was very dark. The digging bar I was using would send off large orange/red sparks when it hit a rock. Being the amateur physicist that I am. I thought, wow, those are about 650…
Lambda
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If fields die off proportional to R^2, why does light keep going?

Why does light continue on forever if it was created from some source whose radiation dwindles at a rate of the inverse square of distance. Clearly light can be viewed as an interdependent phenomena, the E field pulling the B field along with it,…
user24082
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Why EM waves lose energy via the square of distance but the light will not? Does that mean that EM propagate forever in vacuum?

today at some class at the university we were taught about the propagation of EM (electromagnetic) waves and that they lose energy proportional to the square of distance. Then someone asked: "Why then the light propagate forever in outer space?" And…
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For an accelerated charge to radiate, is an electromagnetic field as the source necessary?

For an accelerated charge to radiate, must an electromagnetic field be the source of the force? Would it radiate if accelerated by a gravitational field?
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