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optics
3. Exact radiating solutions to Maxwell’s
equations in a vacuum
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Copyright (c) Malcolm
Kemp 2010
 
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The explanation of the unusual properties of the idealised
optical layout described in Section 2 lies in the
behaviour of certain types of exact solutions of Maxwell’s equations in the
presence of idealised plane mirrors.
 
Before exploring these further, let us first the nature of
radiating solutions to Maxwell’s equations in a vacuum. These can be
written as superpositions of (potentially infinitely many) outwardly and
inwardly radiating electric and magnetic dipoles.
 
Born & Wolf (1980) describe the behaviour of a single outwardly
radiating electric dipole, characterised by source location  ,
a unit vector,
,
a unit vector,  ,
describing the direction in which the dipole is pointing, and an electric
polarization vector
,
describing the direction in which the dipole is pointing, and an electric
polarization vector  whose
value at point
 whose
value at point  and
at time
 and
at time  is
given by
 is
given by  ,
where
,
where  is the Dirac function and
 is the Dirac function and  is a function
of time. The full (i.e. exact) solution to Maxwell’s equations (in a vacuum)
for such a dipole then has the following form, where
 is a function
of time. The full (i.e. exact) solution to Maxwell’s equations (in a vacuum)
for such a dipole then has the following form, where  ,
,
 ,
,
 and
 and
 are
the electric field, electric displacement, magnetic and magnetic induction
vectors respectively:
 are
the electric field, electric displacement, magnetic and magnetic induction
vectors respectively:
 


 
Here  and
 and
 is
the speed of light. Square brackets denote retarded values, i.e.
 is
the speed of light. Square brackets denote retarded values, i.e.  .
.
 
The form of this solution is slightly easier to visualise in
spherical polar coordinates  taking
the origin as the source location,
 taking
the origin as the source location,  ,
,
 as
the angle between
 as
the angle between  and
 and
 and
 and
 as
the angle that the projection of
 as
the angle that the projection of  onto
the plane perpendicular to
 onto
the plane perpendicular to  makes
with a constant vector perpendicular to
 makes
with a constant vector perpendicular to  .
If
.
If   ,
,
 and
 and
 are
unit vectors in the direction of increasing
 are
unit vectors in the direction of increasing  ,
,
 and
 and respectively
then the outwardly radiating electric dipole has the form
 respectively
then the outwardly radiating electric dipole has the form   and
 and
 where:
 where:
 



 
The form of the inwardly radiating electric
dipole, i.e. the time reversed solution, can be found by replacing  by
 by  and
 and  by
 by
 (since
 (since
 )
and by placing a negative sign in front of the corresponding expressions for
)
and by placing a negative sign in front of the corresponding expressions for  and
 and  (since
 (since  ).
).
 
The corresponding outwardly and inwardly radiating magnetic
dipoles have  replaced
by
 replaced
by  and
 and
 replaced
by
 replaced
by  ,
given the symmetric nature of Maxwell’s equations in a vacuum. For reasons that
will become obvious later on, we will concentrate on these latter types of
dipoles in the remainder of this analysis.
,
given the symmetric nature of Maxwell’s equations in a vacuum. For reasons that
will become obvious later on, we will concentrate on these latter types of
dipoles in the remainder of this analysis.
 
We can further decompose each of these dipoles into
superpositions of sinusoidally time-varying dipoles all with the same origin,
using Fourier analysis. These will be the types of dipoles that we will
concentrate on in the remainder of this analysis. For magnetic dipoles
with  ,
,
 and
 and
 constant,
these have the following form (where
 constant,
these have the following form (where  is
the real part of the complex number
 is
the real part of the complex number  and
 and  is the square
root of
 is the square
root of  ):
):
 
Outwardly radiating (magnetic) dipoles
 


 
Inwardly radiating (magnetic) dipoles
 


 
where
 








 
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