
EBK FUNDAMENTALS OF APPLIED ELECTROMAGN
7th Edition
ISBN: 8220100663659
Author: ULABY
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 4.6, Problem 14CQ
What are the electromagnetic constitutive parameters of a material?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
Find Va and Vb using Nodal analysis
Calculate the nodal voltage in the circuit
Calculate the mesh currents, find Ia, Ib, Ic. Apply mesh analysis
Chapter 4 Solutions
EBK FUNDAMENTALS OF APPLIED ELECTROMAGN
Ch. 4.2 - What happens to Maxwells equations under static...Ch. 4.2 - How is the current density J related to the volume...Ch. 4.2 - Prob. 3CQCh. 4.2 - A square plate residing in the xy plane is...Ch. 4.2 - A thick spherical shell centered at the origin...Ch. 4.3 - When characterizing the electrical permittivity of...Ch. 4.3 - If the electric field is zero at a given point in...Ch. 4.3 - State the principle of linear superposition as it...Ch. 4.3 - Four charges of 10 C each are located in free...Ch. 4.3 - Two identical charges are located on the x axis at...
Ch. 4.3 - In a hydrogen atom the electron and proton are...Ch. 4.3 - An infinite sheet with uniform surface charge...Ch. 4.4 - Explain Gausss law. Under what circumstances is it...Ch. 4.4 - How should one choose a Gaussian surface?Ch. 4.4 - Two infinite lines, each carrying a uniform charge...Ch. 4.4 - A thin spherical shell of radius a carries a...Ch. 4.4 - A spherical volume of radius a contains a uniform...Ch. 4.5 - What is a conservative field?Ch. 4.5 - Why is the electric potential at a point in space...Ch. 4.5 - Prob. 11CQCh. 4.5 - Why is it usually easier to compute V for a given...Ch. 4.5 - Prob. 13CQCh. 4.5 - Determine the electric potential at the origin due...Ch. 4.5 - A spherical shell of radius a has a uniform...Ch. 4.6 - What are the electromagnetic constitutive...Ch. 4.6 - Prob. 15CQCh. 4.6 - What is the conductivity of a perfect dielectric?Ch. 4.6 - Prob. 17CQCh. 4.6 - Prob. 18CQCh. 4.6 - Determine the density of free electrons in...Ch. 4.6 - Prob. 13ECh. 4.6 - A 50 m long copper wire has a circular cross...Ch. 4.6 - Prob. 15ECh. 4.7 - What is a polar material? A nonpolar material?Ch. 4.7 - Prob. 20CQCh. 4.7 - What happens when dielectric breakdown occurs?Ch. 4.7 - Find E1 in Fig. 4-19 if E2=x2y3+z3(v/m),1=20,2=80,...Ch. 4.7 - Repeat Exercise 4.16 for a boundary with surface...Ch. 4.8 - What are the boundary conditions for the electric...Ch. 4.8 - Prob. 23CQCh. 4.9 - How is the capacitance of a two-conductor...Ch. 4.9 - What are fringing fields and when may they be...Ch. 4.10 - To bring a charge q from infinity to a given point...Ch. 4.10 - Prob. 27CQCh. 4.10 - The radii of the inner and outer conductors of a...Ch. 4.11 - What is the fundamental premise of the image...Ch. 4.11 - Given a charge distribution, what are the various...Ch. 4.11 - Use the result of Example 4-13 to find the surface...Ch. 4 - A cube 2 m on a side is located in the first...Ch. 4 - Prob. 2PCh. 4 - Find the total charge contained in a round-top...Ch. 4 - If the line charge density is given by l = 24y2...Ch. 4 - Find the total charge on a circular disk defined...Ch. 4 - If J = 4xz (A/m2), find the current I flowing...Ch. 4 - Prob. 7PCh. 4 - An electron beam shaped like a circular cylinder...Ch. 4 - Prob. 9PCh. 4 - A line of charge of uniform density occupies a...Ch. 4 - A square with sides of 2 m has a charge of 40 C at...Ch. 4 - Three point charges, each with q = 3 nC, are...Ch. 4 - Charge q1 = 6 C is located at (1 cm, 1 cm, 0) and...Ch. 4 - A line of charge with uniform density = 8 (C/m)...Ch. 4 - Prob. 15PCh. 4 - A line of charge with uniform density l extends...Ch. 4 - Repeat Example 4-5 for liie circular disk of...Ch. 4 - Multiple charges at different locations are said...Ch. 4 - Three infinite lines of charge, all parallel to...Ch. 4 - Prob. 20PCh. 4 - A horizontal strip lying in the xy plane is of...Ch. 4 - Prob. 22PCh. 4 - Prob. 23PCh. 4 - Charge Q1 is uniformly distributed over a thin...Ch. 4 - The electric flux density inside a dielectric...Ch. 4 - Prob. 26PCh. 4 - An infinitely long cylindrical shell extending...Ch. 4 - If the charge density increases linearly with...Ch. 4 - A spherical shell with outer radius b surrounds a...Ch. 4 - Prob. 30PCh. 4 - Prob. 31PCh. 4 - A circular ring of charge of radius a lies in the...Ch. 4 - Prob. 33PCh. 4 - Find the electric potential V at a location a...Ch. 4 - For the electric dipole shown in Fig. 4-13, d = 1...Ch. 4 - For each of the distributions of the electric...Ch. 4 - Two infinite lines of charge, both parallel to the...Ch. 4 - Given the electric field E=R18R2(V/m) find the...Ch. 4 - An infinitely long line of charge with uniform...Ch. 4 - The xy plane contains a uniform sheet of charge...Ch. 4 - A cylindrical bar of silicon has a radius of 4 mm...Ch. 4 - Repeat Problem 4.41 for a bar of germanium with e...Ch. 4 - A 100 m long conductor of uniform cross-section...Ch. 4 - Prob. 44PCh. 4 - Apply the result of Problem 4.44 to find the...Ch. 4 - A 2 103 mm thick square sheet of aluminum has 5 cm...Ch. 4 - A cylinder-shaped carbon resistor is 8 cm in...Ch. 4 - With reference to Fig. 4-19, find E1 if...Ch. 4 - An infinitely long cylinder of radius a is...Ch. 4 - If E=R150(V/m) at the surface of a 5-cm conducting...Ch. 4 - Figure P4.51 shows three planar dielectric slabs...Ch. 4 - Determine the force of attraction in a...Ch. 4 - Dielectric breakdown occurs in a material whenever...Ch. 4 - An electron with charge Qe = 1.61019 C and mass me...Ch. 4 - In a dielectric medium with r = 4, the electric...Ch. 4 - Prob. 56PCh. 4 - Prob. 57PCh. 4 - Prob. 58PCh. 4 - Prob. 59PCh. 4 - Prob. 60PCh. 4 - Prob. 61PCh. 4 - Conducting wires above a conducting plane carry...Ch. 4 - Prob. 63P
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, electrical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Find Va and Vb using Nodal analysisarrow_forward4. A battery operated sensor transmits to a receiver that is plugged in to a power outlet. The device is continuously operated. The battery is a 3.6 V coin-cell battery with a 245mAHr capacity. The application requires a bit rate of 36 Mbps and an error rate of less than 10^-3. The channel has a center frequency of 2.4 GHz, a bandwidth of 10 MHz and a noise power spectral density of 10^-14 W/Hz. The maximum distance is 36 meters and the losses in the channel attenuates the signal by 0.25 dB/meter. Your company has two families of chips that you can use. An M-ary ASK and an M-ary QAM chip. The have very different power requirements as shown in the table below. The total current for the system is the current required to achieve the desired Eb/No PLUS the current identified below: Hokies PSK Chip Set Operating Current NOT Including the required Eb/No for the application Hokies QAM Chip Set Operating Current NOT Including the required Eb/No for the application Chip ID M-ary Voltage (volts)…arrow_forwardUsing the 802.11a specifications given below, in Matlab (or similar tool) create the time domain signal for one OFDM symbol using QPSK modulation. See attached plot for the QPSK constellation. Your results should include the power measure in the time and frequency domain and comment on those results. BW 802.11a OFDM PHY Parameters 20 MHZ OBW Subcarrer Spacing Information Rate Modulation Coding Rate Total Subcarriers Data Subcarriers Pilot Subcarriers DC Subcarrier 16.6 MHZ 312.5 Khz (20MHz/64 Pt FFT) 6/9/12/18/24/36/48/54 Mbits/s BPSK, QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM 1/2, 2/3, 3/4 52 (Freq Index -26 to +26) 48 4 (-21, -7, +7, +21) *Always BPSK Null (0 subcarrier) 52 subarriers -7 (48 Data, 4 Pilot (BPSK), 1 Null) -26 -21 0 7 21 +26 14 One Subcarrier 1 OFDM symbol 1 OFDM Burst -OBW 16.6 MHz BW 20 MHZ 1 constellation point = 52 subcarriers = one or more OFDM symbols 802.11a OFDM Physical Parameters Show signal at this point x bits do Serial Data d₁ S₁ Serial-to- Input Signal Parallel Converter IFFT…arrow_forward
- Find Vb and Va using Mesh analysisarrow_forward1. The communication channel bandwidth is 25 MHz centered at 1GHz and has a noise power spectral density of 10^-9 W/Hz. The channel loss between the transmitter and receiver is 25dB. The application requires a bit rate of 200Mbps and BER of less than 10^-4. Excluding Mary FSK, Determine the minimum transmit power required.arrow_forward2. An existing system uses noncoherent BASK. The application requires a BER of <10^-5. The current transmit power is 25 Watts. If the system changes to a coherent BPSK modulation scheme, what is the new transmit power required to deliver the same BER?arrow_forward
- 3. You are to design a 9-volt battery operated communication system that must last 3 years without replacing batteries. The communication channel bandwidth is 100 KHz centered at 5.8 GHz. The application requires a BER of <10^-5 and a data rate of 1 Mbps. The channel can be modeled as AWGN with a noise power spectral density of 10^-8 W/Hz. ((a) What modulation scheme would you use? B) what is the required capacity of the batteries? and (c) is the battery commercially available?arrow_forwardDesign a traffic light PIC microcontroller program with Green LED has 3 Sec Yellow LED has 0.5 Sec Red LED has 3 Sec RASAN4SSC20UT 8 RBOINT RB1 9 RB2 U1 PIC16F877A-I/PT 18 19 MCLRVPP RAOANO 20 RA1AN1 30 OSCICLKI 21 RAZAN2VREF-CVREF 31 OSC2CLKO RABAN3VREF+ 22 LED1 LED-3MM 〃 R1 330 RA4TOCKIC1OUT 23 7 VDD 28 VDD 6 VSS 29 VSS 24 LED2 LED-3MM R2 10 330 RB3PGM 11 + 14 RB4 38 RDOPSPO RB5 15 LED3 39 RD1PSP1 40 RD2PSP2 RB6PGC- RB7PGD 17 16 LED-3MM R3 330 41 RD3PSP3 2 RD4PSP4 RCOT1OSOTICKK 3 RDSPSPS RC1T10SICCP24 RD6PSP6 RC2CCP1 5 RD7PSP7 RC3SCKSCL RC4SDISDA 25 REORDANS RCSSDO 27 29 REIWRANG RC6TXCK- RE2CSAN7 RC7RXDT DAWWWW 32 35 36 37 42 43 44 1 12 NO 13 NC 33 NO 34 NCarrow_forward: +0 العنوان I need a detailed drawing with explanation しじ ined sove in peaper Anoting Q4// Draw and Evaluate √√√xy-²sin(y²)dydx PU+96er Lake Ge Q3// Find the volume of the region between the cylinder 2 = y² and the xy- plane that is bounded by the planes x = 1, x = 2, y = -2, and y = 2. T Marrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Introductory Circuit Analysis (13th Edition)Electrical EngineeringISBN:9780133923605Author:Robert L. BoylestadPublisher:PEARSONDelmar's Standard Textbook Of ElectricityElectrical EngineeringISBN:9781337900348Author:Stephen L. HermanPublisher:Cengage LearningProgrammable Logic ControllersElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780073373843Author:Frank D. PetruzellaPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
- Fundamentals of Electric CircuitsElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780078028229Author:Charles K Alexander, Matthew SadikuPublisher:McGraw-Hill EducationElectric Circuits. (11th Edition)Electrical EngineeringISBN:9780134746968Author:James W. Nilsson, Susan RiedelPublisher:PEARSONEngineering ElectromagneticsElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780078028151Author:Hayt, William H. (william Hart), Jr, BUCK, John A.Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,

Introductory Circuit Analysis (13th Edition)
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780133923605
Author:Robert L. Boylestad
Publisher:PEARSON

Delmar's Standard Textbook Of Electricity
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9781337900348
Author:Stephen L. Herman
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Programmable Logic Controllers
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780073373843
Author:Frank D. Petruzella
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education

Fundamentals of Electric Circuits
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780078028229
Author:Charles K Alexander, Matthew Sadiku
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education

Electric Circuits. (11th Edition)
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780134746968
Author:James W. Nilsson, Susan Riedel
Publisher:PEARSON

Engineering Electromagnetics
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780078028151
Author:Hayt, William H. (william Hart), Jr, BUCK, John A.
Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
The Biot-Savart Law; Author: Jennifer Cash;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1BoIH6Quhiw;License: Standard Youtube License