Poynting Vector

The Poynting vector (named after its inventor John Henry Poynting) is the cross product of the electric field and the magnetic field. For an electromagnetic wave it points in the direction of energy flow and its magnitude is the power per unit area crossing a surface which is normal to it. (The fact that it points perhaps contributes to the frequency with which its name is misspelt.) It is given the symbol S (in bold because it is a vector) and is given by
\mathbf{S} = \mathbf{E} \times \mathbf{H} = \frac{1}{\mu} \mathbf{E} \times \mathbf{B}
where E is the electric field, H and B are the magnetic field (see magnetic field for the difference) and \mu is the permeability of the surrounding medium. For an electromagnetic wave propagating in free space \mu becomes \mu_0, the permeability of free space. Since the electric and magnetic field of an electromagnetic wave oscillate, the magnitude of the Poynting vector changes with time. The average of the magnitude over a long time T (longer than the period of the wave) is called the irradiance, I:
I = \left \langle S \right \rangle_T.

See also

Poynting flux, Poynting theorem

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
george, duke of clarence
tax return
richard neville, 16th earl of warwick
canadian raising
ontology (computer science)
robert blake
auster
hansa
handicraft
aviation traders
antenna gain
upright position
adrien marie legendre
metropolis (1927 movie)
sussex
kingdom of sussex
2050s
paul newman
2015
22nd century bc
redundancy check
quadrature phase shift keying
single sideband emission
freebase
programmable read only memory
reference
havana
robert hooke
core dump
reserved word
american bison
alternating group
even and odd permutations
san francisco, california
alonzo church
australia group
ballet
trade credit
bern
arms control
pole (disambiguation)
quick
down and out in paris and london
mailbomb