Determine the rate at which the electric field changes between the round plates of a capacitor, 8.0 cm in diameter, if the plates are spaced 1.1 mm apart and the voltage across them is changing at a rate of 120 Vs.
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Textbook Solutions for Physics: Principles with Applications
Question
If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak magnitude of 10.5 nT, what is the peak magnitude of the electric field?
Solution
The first step in solving 22 problem number 6 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak magnitude of 10.5 nT, what is the peak magnitude of the electric field?
From the textbook chapter Electromagnetic Waves you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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full solution
If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak
Chapter 22 textbook questions
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Chapter 22: Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
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Chapter 22: Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Calculate the displacement current between the square plates, 5.8 cm on a side, of a capacitor if the electric field is changing at a rate of 1.6 * 106 Vm?s.
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Chapter 22: Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
At a given instant, a 3.8-A current flows in the wires connected to a parallel-plate capacitor. What is the rate at which the electric field is changing between the plates if the square plates are 1.60 cm on a side?
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Chapter 22: Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A 1500-nF capacitor with circular parallel plates 2.0 cm in diameter is accumulating charge at the rate of at some instant in time. What will be the induced magnetic field strength 10.0 cm radially outward from the center of the plates? What will be the value of the field strength after the capacitor is fully charged?
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Chapter 22: Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the electric field in an EM wave has a peak magnitude of what is the peak magnitude of the magnetic field strength?
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Chapter 22: Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak magnitude of 10.5 nT, what is the peak magnitude of the electric field?
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Chapter 22: Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
In an EM wave traveling west, the B field oscillates up and down vertically and has a frequency of 90.0 kHz and an rms strength of Determine the frequency and rms strength of the electric field. What is the direction of its oscillations?
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Chapter 22: Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long does it take light to reach us from the Sun,1.50 * 108 km away?
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Chapter 22: Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long should it take the voices of astronauts on the Moon to reach the Earth? Explain in detail.
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Chapter 22: Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
An EM wave has a wavelength of 720 nm. What is its frequency, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
An EM wave has frequency What is its wavelength, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(I) A widely used “short-wave” radio broadcast band is referred to as the 49-m band. What is the frequency of a 49-m radio signal?
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Chapter 22: Problem 13 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A widely used short-wave radio broadcast band is referred to as the 49-m band. What is the frequency of a 49-m radio signal?
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Chapter 22: Problem 14 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Electromagnetic waves and sound waves can have the same frequency. (a) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave? (b) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz sound wave? (The speed of sound in air is ) (c) Can you hear a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave?
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Chapter 22: Problem 15 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(a) What is the wavelength of a radar signal? (b) What is the frequency of an X-ray with wavelength 0.12 nm
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Chapter 22: Problem 16 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long would it take a message sent as radio waves from Earth to reach Mars when Mars is (a) nearest Earth, (b) farthest from Earth? Assume that Mars and Earth are in the same plane and that their orbits around the Sun are circles (Mars is from the Sun).
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Chapter 22: Problem 17 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) Our nearest star (other than the Sun) is 4.2 light-years away. That is, it takes 4.2 years for the light it emits to reach Earth. How far away is it in meters?
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Chapter 22: Problem 18 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A light-year is a measure of distance (not time). How many meters does light travel in a year?
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Chapter 22: Problem 19 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Pulsed lasers used for science and medicine produce very brief bursts of electromagnetic energy. If the laser light wavelength is 1062 nm (NeodymiumYAG laser), and the pulse lasts for 34 picoseconds, how many wavelengths are found within the laser pulse? How brief would the pulse need to be to fit only one wavelength?
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Chapter 22: Problem 20 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the minimum angular speed at which Michelsons eight-sided mirror would have had to rotate to reflect light into an observers eye by succeeding mirror faces (1 8 of a revolution, Fig. 2210)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 21 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A student wants to scale down Michelsons light-speed experiment to a size that will fit in one room. An eightsided mirror is available, and the stationary mirror can be mounted 12 m from the rotating mirror. If the arrangement is otherwise as shown in Fig. 2210, at what minimum rate must the mirror rotate?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The field in an EM wave has a peak of What is the average rate at which this wave carries energy across unit area per unit time?
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Chapter 22: Problem 23 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has an rms strength of 22.5 nT. How long does it take to deliver 365 J of energy to of a wall that it hits perpendicularly?
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Chapter 22: Problem 24 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How much energy is transported across a area per hour by an EM wave whose E field has an rms strength
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Chapter 22: Problem 25 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A spherically spreading EM wave comes from an 1800-W source. At a distance of 5.0 m, what is the intensity, and what is the rms value of the electric field?
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Chapter 22: Problem 26 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the amplitude of the B field of an EM wave is (a) what is the amplitude of the E field? (b) What is the average power transported across unit area by the EM wave?
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Chapter 22: Problem 27 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the average energy contained in a volume near the Earths surface due to radiant energy from the Sun? See Example 224.
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Chapter 22: Problem 28 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A 15.8-mW laser puts out a narrow beam 2.40 mm in diameter. What are the rms values of E and B in the beam?
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Chapter 22: Problem 29 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) Estimate the average power output of the Sun, given that about \(1350\ W/m^2\) reaches the upper atmosphere of the Earth.
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Chapter 22: Problem 30 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A high-energy pulsed laser emits a 1.0-ns-long pulse of average power The beam is nearly a cylinder in radius. Determine (a) the energy delivered in each pulse, and (b) the rms value of the electric field.
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Chapter 22: Problem 31 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) Estimate the radiation pressure due to a bulb that emits 25 W of EM radiation at a distance of 9.5 cm from the center of the bulb. Estimate the force exerted on your fingertip if you place it at this point.
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Chapter 22: Problem 32 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What size should the solar panel on a satellite orbiting Jupiter be if it is to collect the same amount of radiation from the Sun as a solar panel on a satellite orbiting Earth? [Hint: Assume the inverse square law (Eq. 1116b).]
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Chapter 22: Problem 33 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Suppose you have a car with a 100-hp engine. How large a solar panel would you need to replace the engine with solar power? Assume that the solar panels can utilize 20% of the maximum solar energy that reaches the Earths surface (1000 W m2
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Chapter 22: Problem 34 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the range of wavelengths for (a) FM radio (88 MHz to 108 MHz) and (b) AM radio (535 kHz to 1700 kHz)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 35 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the wavelength for a 1.9-GHz cell phone transmitter.
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Chapter 22: Problem 36 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Compare 980 on the AM dial to 98.1 on FM. Which has the longer wavelength, and by what factor is it larger?
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Chapter 22: Problem 37 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What are the wavelengths for two TV channels that broadcast at 54.0 MHz (Channel 2) and 692 MHz (Channel 51)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 38 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(I) The variable capacitor in the tuner of an AM radio has a capacitance of 2500 pF when the radio is tuned to a station at 550 kHz.What must the capacitance be for a station near the other end of the dial, 1610 kHz?
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Chapter 22: Problem 39 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The oscillator of a 98.3-MHz FM station has an inductance of What value must the capacitance be?
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Chapter 22: Problem 40 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A certain FM radio tuning circuit has a fixed capacitor Tuning is done by a variable inductance. What range of values must the inductance have to tune stations from 88 MHz to 108 MHz?
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Chapter 22: Problem 41 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) An amateur radio operator wishes to build a receiver that can tune a range from 14.0 MHz to 15.0 MHz. A variable capacitor has a minimum capacitance of 86 pF. (a) What is the required value of the inductance? (b) What is the maximum capacitance used on the variable capacitor?
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Chapter 22: Problem 42 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A satellite beams microwave radiation with a power of 13 kW toward the Earths surface, 550 km away. When the beam strikes Earth, its circular diameter is about 1500 m. Find the rms electric field strength of the beam
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Chapter 22: Problem 43 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(III) A 1.60-m-long FM antenna is oriented parallel to the electric field of an EM wave. How large must the electric field be to produce a 1.00-mV (rms) voltage between the ends of the antenna?What is the rate of energy transport per \(m^2\)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 44 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Who will hear the voice of a singer first: a person in the balcony 50.0 m away from the stage (see Fig. 2221), or a person 1200 km away at home whose ear is next to the radio listening to a live broadcast? Roughly how much sooner? Assume the microphone is a few centimeters from the singer and the temperature is 20C.
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Chapter 22: Problem 45 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A global positioning system (GPS) functions by determining the travel times for EM waves from various satellites to a land-based GPS receiver. If the receiver is to detect a change in travel distance on the order of 3 m, what is the associated change in travel time (in ns) that must be measured?
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Chapter 22: Problem 46 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Light is emitted from an ordinary lightbulb filament in wavetrain bursts about in duration. What is the length in space of such wave trains?
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Chapter 22: Problem 47 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The voice from an astronaut on the Moon (Fig. 2222) was beamed to a listening crowd on Earth. If you were standing 28 m from the loudspeaker on Earth, what was the total time lag between when you heard the sound and when the sound entered a microphone on the Moon? Explain whether the microphone was inside the space helmet, or outside, and why.
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Chapter 22: Problem 48 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Radio-controlled clocks throughout the United States receive a radio signal from a transmitter in Fort Collins, Colorado, that accurately (within a microsecond) marks the beginning of each minute. A slight delay, however, is introduced because this signal must travel from the transmitter to the clocks. Assuming Fort Collins is no more than 3000 km from any point in the U.S., what is the longest travel- time delay?
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Chapter 22: Problem 49 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the Sun were to disappear or radically change its output, how long would it take for us on Earth to learn about it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 50 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Cosmic microwave background radiation fills space with an average energy density of about (a) Find the rms value of the electric field associated with this radiation. (b) How far from a 7.5-kW radio transmitter emitting uniformly in all directions would you find a comparable value?
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Chapter 22: Problem 51 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
. What are and at a point 2.50 m from a light source whose output is 18 W? Assume the bulb emits radiation of a single frequency uniformly in all directions
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Chapter 22: Problem 52 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the rms electric field in the sunlight that hits Mars, knowing that the Earth receives about and that Mars is 1.52 times farther from the Sun (on average) than is the Earth
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Chapter 22: Problem 53 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The average intensity of a particular TV station’s signal is \(1.0 \times 10^{-13}\ W/m^2\) when it arrives at a 33-cm-diameter satellite TV antenna. (a) Calculate the total energy received by the antenna during 4.0 hours of viewing this station’s programs. (b) Estimate the amplitudes of the E and B fields of the EM wave.
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Chapter 22: Problem 54 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What length antenna would be appropriate for a portable device that could receive satellite TV?
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Chapter 22: Problem 55 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A radio station is allowed to broadcast at an average power not to exceed 25 kW. If an electric field amplitude of is considered to be acceptable for receiving the radio transmission, estimate how many kilometers away you might be able to detect this station.
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Chapter 22: Problem 56 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The radiation pressure (Section 226) created by electromagnetic waves might someday be used to power spacecraft through the use of a solar sail, Example 226. (a) Assuming total reflection, what would be the pressure on a solar sail located at the same distance from the Sun as the Earth (where )? (b) Suppose the sail material has a mass of What would be the acceleration of the sail due to solar radiation pressure? (c) A realistic solar sail would have a payload. How big a sail would you need to accelerate a 100-kg payload at 1 x 103 ms2?
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Chapter 22: Problem 57 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
. Suppose a 35-kW radio station emits EM waves uniformly in all directions. (a) How much energy per second crosses a area 1.0 km from the transmitting antenna? (b) What is the rms magnitude of the field at this point, assuming the station is operating at full power? What is the rms voltage induced in a 1.0-m-long vertical car antenna (c) 1.0 km away, (d) 50 km away?
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Chapter 22: Problem 58 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A point source emits light energy uniformly in all directions at an average rate with a single frequency f. Show that the peak electric field in the wave is given by [Hint: The surface area of a sphere is .]
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Chapter 22: Problem 59 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the maximum power level of a radio station so as to avoid electrical breakdown of air at a distance of 0.65 m from the transmitting antenna? Assume the antenna is a point source. Air breaks down in an electric field of about \(3 \times 10^6\ V/m\).
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Chapter 22: Problem 60 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate how long an AM antenna would have to be if it were (a) or (b) AM radio is roughly 1 MHz (530 kHz to 1.7 MHz).
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Chapter 22: Problem 61 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
12 km from a radio stations transmitting antenna, the amplitude of the electric field is What is the average power output of the radio station?
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 1COQ Which of the following best describes the difference between radio waves and X-rays? (a) X-rays are radiation whereas radio waves are electromagnetic waves. (b) Both can be thought of as electromagnetic waves. They differ only in wave length and frequency. (c) X-rays are pure energy. Radio waves are made of fields, not energy. (d) Radio waves come from electric currents in an antenna. X-rays are not related to electric charge. (e) X-rays are made up of particles called photons whereas radio waves are oscillations in space.
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
In a vacuum, what is the difference between a radio wave and an X-ray? (a) Wavelength. (b) Frequency. (c) Speed.
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
In a vacuum, what is the difference between a radio wave and an X-ray? (a) Wavelength. (b) Frequency. (c) Speed.
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 1Q (II) Determine the rate at which the electric field changes between the round plates of a capacitor, 8.0 cm in diameter, if the plates are spaced 1.1 mm apart and the voltage across them is changing at a rate of 120 V/s
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Chapter : Problem 1 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 1SL How practical is solar power for various devices? Assume that on a sunny day, sunlight has an intensity of 1000 W/m2 at the surface of Earth and that a solar-cell panel can convert 20% of that sunlight into electric power. Calculate the area A of solar panel needed to power (a) a calculator that consumes 50mW, (b) a hair dryer that consumes 1500W, (c) a car that would require 40 hp. (d) In each case, would the area A be small enough to be mounted on the device itself, or in the case of (b) on the roof of a house?
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The radius of an atom is on the order of \(10^{-10}\ m\). In comparison, the wavelength of visible light is (a) much smaller. (b) about the same size. (c) much larger.
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 2P (II) Calculate the displacement current Io between the square plates, 5.8 cm on a side, of a capacitor if the electric field is changing at a rate of 1.6 X 106 V/m.s.
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 2Q Is sound an EM wave? If not, what kind of wave is it?
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Chapter : Problem 2 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 2SL A powerful laser portrayed in a movie provides a 3-mm diameter beam of green light with a power of 3W. A good agent inside the Space Shuttle aims the laser beam at an enemy astronaut hovering outside. The mass of the enemy astronaut is 120 kg and the Space Shuttle 103,000 kg. (a) Determine the “radiation-pressure” force exerted on the enemy by the laser beam assuming her suit is perfectly reflecting. (b) If the enemy is 30 m from the Shuttle’s center of mass, estimate the gravitational force the Shuttle exerts on the enemy. (c) Which of the two forces is larger, and by what factor?
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 3MCQ Which of the following travel at the same speed as light? (Choose all that apply.) (a) Radio waves. (d) Ultrasonic waves. (g) Gamma rays. (b)Microwaves. (e) Infrared radiation. (h) X-rays. (c) Radar. (f) Cell phone signals.
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 3P (II) At a given instant, a 3.8-A current flows in the wires connected to a parallel-plate capacitor. What is the rate at which the electric field is changing between the plates if the square plates are 1.60 cm on a side?
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 3Q Can EM waves travel through a perfect vacuum? Can sound waves?
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Chapter : Problem 3 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 3SL The Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico can detect a radio wave with an intensity as low as 1 X 10-23 W/m2. Consider a “best-case” scenario for communication with extraterrestrials: suppose an advanced civilization a distance x away from Earth is able to transform the entire power output of a Sun-like star completely into a radio-wave signal which is transmitted uniformly in all directions. (a) In order for Arecibo to detect this radio signal, what is the maximum value for x in light-years (b) How does this maximum value compare with the 100,000-ly size of our Milky Way galaxy? The intensity of sunlight at Earth’s orbital distance from the Sun is 1350 W/m2 [Hint: Assume the inverse square law (Eq. 11–16b).]
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 4MCQ Which of the following types of electromagnetic radiation travels the fastest? (a) Radio waves. (b) Visible light waves. (c) X-rays. (d) Gamma rays. (e) All the above travel at the same speed.
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(III) A 1500-nF capacitor with circular parallel plates 2.0 cm in diameter is accumulating charge at the rate of 32.0 mC/s at some instant in time. What will be the induced magnetic field strength 10.0 cm radially outward from the center of the plates? What will be the value of the field strength after the capacitor is fully charged?
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 4Q When you flip a light switch on, does the light go on immediately? Explain.
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Chapter : Problem 4 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Laser light can be focused (at best) to a spot with a radius \(r\) equal to its wavelength \(\lambda\) Suppose a 1.0-W beam of green laser light \(\left(\lambda=5 \times 10^{-7} \mathrm{~m}\right)\) forms such a spot and illuminates a cylindrical object of radius \(r\) and length \(r\) (Fig. 22-23). Estimate \((a)\) the radiation pressure and force on the object, and \((b)\) its acceleration, if its density equals that of water and it absorbs all the radiation. [This order-of-magnitude calculation convinced researchers of the feasibility of "optical tweezers," page Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: r \lambda (\lambda =5 x 10^-7m) r r (a) (b)
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Chapter : Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 5MCQ In empty space, which quantity is always larger for X-ray radiation than for a radio wave? (a) Amplitude. (c) Frequency. (b)Wavelength. (d) Speed
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Chapter : Problem 5 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(I) If the electric field in an EM wave has a peak magnitude of \(0.72 \times 10^{-4} V/m\), what is the peak magnitude of the magnetic field strength?
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Chapter : Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 6MCQ If electrons in a wire vibrate up and down 1000 times per second, they will create an electromagnetic wave having (a) a wavelength of 1000 m. (c) a speed of 1000 m/s. (b) a frequency of 1000 Hz. (d) an amplitude of 1000 m.
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Chapter : Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 6P (I) If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak magnitude of 10.5 nT, what is the peak magnitude of the electric field?
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Chapter : Problem 6 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 6Q When you connect two loudspeakers to the output of a stereo amplifier, should you be sure the lead-in wires are equal in length to avoid a time lag between speakers? Explain.
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Chapter : Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the Earth–Sun distance were doubled, the intensity of radiation from the Sun that reaches the Earth’s surface would (a) quadruple. (b) double. (c) drop to \(\frac{1}{2}\) (d) drop to \(\frac{1}{4}\) Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 1 \ 2 1 \ 4
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Chapter : Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 7P (I) In an EM wave traveling west, the B field oscillates up and down vertically and has a frequency of 90.0 kHz and an rms strength of 7.75 X 10-9 T. Determine the frequency and rms strength of the electric field. What is the direction of its oscillations?
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Chapter : Problem 7 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
In the electromagnetic spectrum, what type of EM wave would have a wavelength of \(10^{3} \mathrm{~km}\) ? 1 km? 1 m? 1 cm? 1 mm? \(1 \mu \mathrm{m}\)? Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 10^3 km 1mu{m}
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Chapter : Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 8MCQ An electromagnetic wave is traveling straight down toward the center of the Earth. At a certain moment in time the electric field points west. In which direction does the magnetic field point at this moment? (a) North. (d)West. (g) Either (a) or (b). (b) South. (e) Up. (h) Either (c) or (d). (c) East. (f) Down. (i) Either (e) or (f).
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Chapter : Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 8P (I) How long does it take light to reach us from the Sun, 1.50 X 108 km away?
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Chapter : Problem 8 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 8Q Can radio waves have the same frequencies as sound waves (20 Hz–20,000 Hz)?
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Chapter : Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the intensity of an electromagnetic wave doubles, (a) the electric field must also double. (b) the magnetic field must also double. (c) both the magnetic field and the electric field must increase by a factor of \(\sqrt{2}\) d) Any of the above. Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: \sqrt 2
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Chapter : Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) How long should it take the voices of astronauts on the Moon to reach the Earth? Explain in detail.
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Chapter : Problem 9 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 9Q If a radio transmitter has a vertical antenna, should a receiver’s antenna (rod type) be vertical or horizontal to obtain best reception?
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Chapter : Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If all else is the same, for which surface would the radiation pressure from light be the greatest? (a) A black surface. (b) A gray surface. (c) A yellow surface. (d) A white surface. (e) All experience the same radiation pressure, because they are exposed to the same light.
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Chapter : Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 10P (I) An EM wave has a wavelength of 720 nm. What is its frequency, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter : Problem 10 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 10Q The carrier frequencies of FM broadcasts are much higher than for AM broadcasts. On the basis of what you learned about diffraction in Chapter 11, explain why AM signals can be detected more readily than FM signals behind low hills or buildings.
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Chapter : Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 11MCQ Problem 5MCQStarting in 2009, TV stations in the U.S. switched to digital signals. [See Sections 22–7, 17–10, and 17–11.] To watch today’s digital broadcast Problem 5MCQTV, could you use a pre-2009 TV antenna meant for analog? Problem 5MCQExplain. (a) No; analog antennas do not receive digital signals. (b) No; digital signals are broadcast at different frequencies, so you need a different antenna. (c) Yes; digital signals are broadcast with the same carrier frequencies, so your old antenna will be fine. (d) No; you cannot receive digital signals through an antenna and need to switch to cable or satellite.
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Chapter : Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 11P (I) An EM wave has frequency 7.14 X 1014 Hz. What is its wavelength, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter : Problem 11 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 11Q Discuss how cordless telephones make use of EM waves. What about cell phones?
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Chapter : Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 12P (I) A widely used “short-wave” radio broadcast band is referred to as the 49-m band. What is the frequency of a 49-m radio signal?
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Chapter : Problem 12 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 12Q A lost person may signal by switching a flashlight on and off using Morse code. This is actually a modulated EM wave. Is it AM or FM? What is the frequency of the carrier, approximately?
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Chapter : Problem 13 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 13P (I) What is the frequency of a microwave whose wavelength is 1.50 cm?
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Chapter : Problem 14 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 14P (II) Electromagnetic waves and sound waves can have the same frequency. (a) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave? (b) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz sound wave? (The speed of sound in air is 341 m/s. ) (c) Can you hear a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave?
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Chapter : Problem 15 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 15P (II) (a) What is the wavelength of a 22.75 X 109 Hz radar signal? (b) What is the frequency of an X-ray with wavelength 0.12 nm?
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Chapter : Problem 16 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 16P (II) How long would it take a message sent as radio waves from Earth to reach Mars when Mars is (a) nearest Earth, (b) farthest from Earth? Assume that Mars and Earth are in the same plane and that their orbits around the Sun are circles (Mars is ? 230 X 106 km from the Sun).
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Chapter : Problem 17 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 17P (II) Our nearest star (other than the Sun) is 4.2 light-years away. That is, it takes 4.2 years for the light it emits to reach Earth. How far away is it in meters?
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Chapter : Problem 18 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 18P (II) A light-year is a measure of distance (not time). How many meters does light travel in a year?
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Chapter : Problem 19 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 19P (II) Pulsed lasers used for science and medicine produce very brief bursts of electromagnetic energy. If the laser light wavelength is 1062 nm (Neodymium–YAG laser), and the pulse lasts for 34 picoseconds, how many wavelengths are found within the laser pulse? How brief would the pulse need to be to fit only one wavelength?
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Chapter : Problem 20 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 20P (II) What is the minimum angular speed at which Michelson’s eight-sided mirror would have had to rotate to reflect light into an observer’s eye by succeeding mirror faces (1 8 of a revolution, Fig. 22–10)?
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Chapter : Problem 21 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
\(\text { (II) }\) A student wants to scale down Michelson’s light-speed experiment to a size that will fit in one room. An eight-sided mirror is available, and the stationary mirror can be mounted \(12 m\) from the rotating mirror. If the arrangement is otherwise as shown in Fig. 22–10, at what minimum rate must the mirror rotate? Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: (II) 12 m
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
EXERCISE A At a particular instant in time, a wave has its electric field pointing north and its magnetic field pointing up. In which direction is the wave traveling? \(\text { (a) }\) South, \(\text { (b) }\) west, \(\text { (c) }\) east, \(\text { (d) }\) down, \(\text { (e) }\) not enough information. [See Fig. 22–7.] Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
EXERCISE B Return to the Chapter-Opening Question, page 625, and answer it again now. Try to explain why you may have answered differently the first time. We will meet various types of EM waves later. However, it is worth mentioning here that infrared (IR) radiation (EM waves whose frequency is just less than that of visible light) is mainly responsible for the heating effect of the Sun. The Sun emits not only visible light but substantial amounts of IR and UV (ultraviolet) as well. The molecules of our skin tend to “resonate” at infrared frequencies, so it is these that are preferentially absorbed and thus warm us. We humans experience EM waves differently depending on their wavelengths: Our eyes detect wavelengths between about \(4 \times 10^{-7} \mathrm{~m} \text { and } 7.5 \times 10^{-7} \mathrm{~m}\) (visible light), whereas our skin detects longer wavelengths (IR). Many EM wavelengths we don’t detect directly at all. Light and other electromagnetic waves travel at a speed of \(3 \times 10^{8} \mathrm{~m} / \mathrm{s}\). Compare this to sound, which travels (see Chapter 12) at a speed of about \(300 \mathrm{~m} / \mathrm{s}\) in air, a million times slower; or to typical freeway speeds of a car, \(30 \mathrm{~m} / \mathrm{s}\) \(\text { (100 km/h, or } 60 \mathrm{mi} / \mathrm{h} \text { ), }\), 10 million times slower than light. EM waves differ from sound waves in another big way: sound waves travel in a medium such as air, and involve motion of air molecules; EM waves do not involve any material—only fields, and they can travel in empty space. Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 4 x 10-7m and 7.5 x 10-7m 3 x 108m/s 300 m/s 30 m/s (100 km/h, or 60 mi/h)
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 22EC What are the frequencies of (a) an 80-m-wavelength radio wave, and (b) an X-ray of wavelength 5.5 X 10–11 m?
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long should a \(\frac{1}{4}-\lambda\) antenna be for an aircraft radio operating at \(165 \mathrm{MHz}\) Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 1 \ 4-\lambda 165 MHz
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 22EE If you are on the phone via satellite to someone only 100 km away, would you notice the same effect discussed in the NOTE above?
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If your voice traveled as a sound wave, how long would it take to go from New York to London?
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Chapter : Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(I) The \(\vec{E}\) field in an EM wave has a peak of \(22.5 \mathrm{mV} / \mathrm{m}\). What is the average rate at which this wave carries energy across unit area per unit time? Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: \vec E 22.5 mV/m
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Chapter : Problem 23 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 23P (II) The magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has an rms strength of 22.5 nT. How long does it take to deliver 365 J of energy to 1.00 cm2 of a wall that it hits perpendicularly?
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Chapter : Problem 24 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 24P (II) How much energy is transported across a 1.00-cm2 area per hour by an EM wave whose Efield has an rms strength of 30.8 mV/m?
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Chapter : Problem 25 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 25P (II) A spherically spreading EM wave comes from an 1800-W source. At a distance of 5.0 m, what is the intensity, and what is the rms value of the electric field?
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Chapter : Problem 26 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 26P (II) If the amplitude of the B field of an EM wave is 2.2 X 10-7T (a) what is the amplitude of the E field? (b)What is the average power transported across unit area by the EM wave?
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Chapter : Problem 27 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
\(\text { (II) }\) What is the average energy contained in a \(1.00-m^{3}\) volume near the Earth’s surface due to radiant energy from the Sun? See Example 22–4. Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: (II) 1.00-m^3
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Chapter : Problem 28 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 28P (II) A 15.8-mW laser puts out a narrow beam 2.40 mm in diameter. What are the rms values of Eand B in the beam?
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Chapter : Problem 29 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 29P (II) Estimate the average power output of the Sun, given that about 1350 W/m2 reaches the upper atmosphere of the Earth.
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Chapter : Problem 30 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 30P (II) A high-energy pulsed laser emits a 1.0-ns-long pulse of average power 1.5 X 1011 W The beam is nearly a cylinder 2.2 X 10-3 in radius. Determine (a) the energy delivered in each pulse, and (b) the rms value of the electric field.
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Chapter : Problem 31 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 31P (II) Estimate the radiation pressure due to a bulb that emits 25 W of EM radiation at a distance of 9.5 cm from the center of the bulb. Estimate the force exerted on your fingertip if you place it at this point.
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Chapter : Problem 32 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 32P (II) What size should the solar panel on a satellite orbiting Jupiter be if it is to collect the same amount of radiation from the Sun as a 1.0 –m2 solar panel on a satellite orbiting Earth? [Hint: Assume the inverse square law (Eq. 11–16b).]
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Chapter : Problem 33 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 33P (III) Suppose you have a car with a 100-hp engine. How large a solar panel would you need to replace the engine with solar power? Assume that the solar panels can utilize 20% of the maximum solar energy that reaches the Earth’s surface (1000W m2).
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Chapter : Problem 34 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 34P (I) What is the range of wavelengths for (a) FM radio (88MHz to 108 MHz) and (b) AM radio (535 kHz to 1700 kHz)?
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Chapter : Problem 35 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 35P (I) Estimate the wavelength for a 1.9-GHz cell phone transmitter.
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Chapter : Problem 36 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 36P (I) Compare 980 on the AM dial to 98.1 on FM. Which has the longer wavelength, and by what factor is it larger?
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Chapter : Problem 37 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 37P (I) What are the wavelengths for two TV channels that broadcast at 54.0 MHz (Channel 2) and 692 MHz (Channel 51)?
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Chapter : Problem 38 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 38P (I) The variable capacitor in the tuner of an AM radio has a capacitance of 2500 pF when the radio is tuned to a station at 550 kHz. What must the capacitance be for a station near the other end of the dial, 1610 kHz?
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Chapter : Problem 39 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 39P (I) The oscillator of a 98.3-MHz FM station has an inductance Of 1.8 µH. What value must the capacitance be?
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Chapter : Problem 40 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 40P (II) A certain FM radio tuning circuit has a fixed capacitor C =810 PF. Tuning is done by a variable inductance. What range of values must the inductance have to tune stations from 88 MHz to 108 MHz?
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Chapter : Problem 41 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 41P (II) An amateur radio operator wishes to build a receiver that can tune a range from 14.0 MHz to 15.0 MHz. A variable capacitor has a minimum capacitance of 86 pF. (a) What is the required value of the inductance? (b) What is the maximum capacitance used on the variable capacitor?
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Chapter : Problem 42 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 42P (II) A satellite beams microwave radiation with a power of 13 kW toward the Earth’s surface, 550 km away. When the beam strikes Earth, its circular diameter is about 1500 m. Find the rms electric field strength of the beam.
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Chapter : Problem 43 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 43P (III) A 1.60-m-long FM antenna is oriented parallel to the electric field of an EM wave. How large must the electric field be to produce a 1.00-mV (rms) voltage between the ends of the antenna? What is the rate of energy transport per m2?
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Chapter : Problem 44 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Who will hear the voice of a singer first: a person in the balcony \(50.0 \mathrm{~m}\) away from the stage (see Fig. 22–21), or a person \(1200 \mathrm{~km}\) away at home whose ear is next to the radio listening to a live broadcast? Roughly how much sooner? Assume the microphone is a few centimeters from the singer and the temperature is \(20^{\circ} \mathrm{C}\). FIGURE 22–21 Problem 44 Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 50.0 m 1200 km 20°C
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Chapter : Problem 45 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 45GP A global positioning system (GPS) functions by determining the travel times for EM waves from various satellites to a land-based GPS receiver. If the receiver is to detect a change in travel distance on the order of 3m, what is the associated change in travel time (in ns) that must be measured?
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Chapter : Problem 46 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Light is emitted from an ordinary lightbulb filament in wavetrain bursts about \(10^{-8}\) in duration. What is the length in space of such wave trains?
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Chapter : Problem 47 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The voice from an astronaut on the Moon (Fig. 22–22) was beamed to a listening crowd on Earth. If you were standing \(28 \mathrm{~m}\) from the loudspeaker on Earth, what was the total time lag between when you heard the sound and when the sound entered a microphone on the Moon? Explain whether the microphone was inside the space helmet, or outside, and why. FIGURE 22–22 Problem 47. Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 28 m
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Chapter : Problem 48 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 48GP Radio-controlled clocks throughout the United States receive a radio signal from a transmitter in Fort Collins, Colorado, that accurately (within a microsecond) marks the beginning of each minute. A slight delay, however, is introduced because this signal must travel from the transmitter to the clocks. Assuming Fort Collins is no more than 3000 km from any point in the U.S., what is the longest travel-time delay?
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Chapter : Problem 49 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 49GP If the Sun were to disappear or radically change its output, how long would it take for us on Earth to learn about it?
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Chapter : Problem 50 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 50GP Cosmic microwave background radiation fills space with an average energy density of about 4 x 10-14 J/m3. (a) Find the rms value of the electric field associated with this radiation. (b) How far from a 7.5-kW radio transmitter emitting uniformly in all directions would you find a comparable value?
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Chapter : Problem 51 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 51GP What are E0 and B0 at a point 2.50 m from a light source whose output is 18 W? Assume the bulb emits radiation of a single frequency uniformly in all directions.
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Chapter : Problem 52 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 52GP Estimate the rms electric field in the sunlight that hits Mars, knowing that the Earth receives about 1350 W/m2 and that Mars is 1.52 times farther from the Sun (on average) than is the Earth.
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Chapter : Problem 53 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 53GP The average intensity of a particular TV station’s signal is 1.0 x 10-13 W/m2 when it arrives at a 33-cm-diameter satellite TV antenna. (a) Calculate the total energy received by the antenna during 4.0 hours of viewing this station’s programs. (b) Estimate the amplitudes of the E and B fields of the EM wave.
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Chapter : Problem 54 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 54GP What length antenna would be appropriate for a portable device that could receive satellite TV?
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Chapter : Problem 55 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 55GP A radio station is allowed to broadcast at an average power not to exceed 25 kW. If an electric field amplitude of 0.020 V/m is considered to be acceptable for receiving the radio transmission, estimate how many kilometers away you might be able to detect this station.
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Chapter : Problem 56 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 56GP The radiation pressure (Section 22–6) created by electromagnetic waves might someday be used to power spacecraft through the use of a “solar sail,” Example 22–6. (a) Assuming total reflection, what would be the pressure on a solar sail located at the same distance from the Sun as the Earth (where T = 1350 W/m2)? (b) Suppose the sail material has a mass of 1 g/m2. What would be the acceleration of the sail due to solar radiation pressure? (c) A realistic solar sail would have a payload. How big a sail would you need to accelerate a 100-kg payload at 1 x 10-3 m/s2 ?
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Chapter : Problem 57 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Suppose a \(35-k W\) radio station emits EM waves uniformly in all directions. (a) How much energy per second crosses a \(1.0-m^{2}\) area \(1.0 \mathrm{~km}\) from the transmitting antenna? (b) What is the rms magnitude of the \(\vec{E}\) field at this point, assuming the station is operating at full power? What is the rms voltage induced in a \(1.0-m-l o n g\) vertical car antenna (c) \(1.0 \mathrm{~km}\) away, (d) \(50 \mathrm{~km}\) away? Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: 35-kW 1.0-m2 1.0 km \vec E 1.0-m-long 1.0 km 50 km
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Chapter : Problem 58 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A point source emits light energy uniformly in all directions at an average rate \(P_{0}\) with a single frequency \(f\). Show that the peak electric field in the wave is given by \(E_{0}=\sqrt{\frac{\mu_{0} c P_{0}}{2 \pi r^{2}}}\) [Hint: The surface area of a sphere is \(4 \pi r^{2}\).] Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: P_0 f E_0=\sqrt \mu_0 c P_0 2 \pi r^2 4 \pi r^2
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Chapter : Problem 59 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 59GP What is the maximum power level of a radio station so as to avoid electrical breakdown of air at a distance of 0.65 m from the transmitting antenna? Assume the antenna is a point source. Air breaks down in an electric field of about 3*106 V/m.
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Chapter : Problem 60 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate how long an AM antenna would have to be if it were \(\text { (a) } \frac{1}{2} \lambda \text { or }(b) \frac{1}{4} \lambda\) AM radio is roughly \(1 M H z(530 k H z \text { to } 1.7 M H z)\). Equation Transcription: Text Transcription: (a) \frac1 2 \lambda or (b) \frac{1 4 \lambda 1MHz(530kHz to 1.7MHz)
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Chapter : Problem 61 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Problem 61GP 12 km from a radio station’s transmitting antenna, the amplitude of the electric field is 0.12 V/m. What is the average power output of the radio station?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Determine the rate at which the electric field changes between the round plates of a capacitor, 8.0 cm in diameter, if the plates are spaced 1.1 mm apart and the voltage across them is changing at a rate of 120 Vs.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Calculate the displacement current between the square plates, 5.8 cm on a side, of a capacitor if the electric field is changing at a rate of 1.6 * 106 Vms.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
At a given instant, a 3.8-A current flows in the wires connected to a parallel-plate capacitor. What is the rate at which the electric field is changing between the plates if the square plates are 1.60 cm on a side?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A 1500-nF capacitor with circular parallel plates 2.0 cm in diameter is accumulating charge at the rate of at some instant in time. What will be the induced magnetic field strength 10.0 cm radially outward from the center of the plates? What will be the value of the field strength after the capacitor is fully charged?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the electric field in an EM wave has a peak magnitude of what is the peak magnitude of the magnetic field strength?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has a peak magnitude of 10.5 nT, what is the peak magnitude of the electric field?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
In an EM wave traveling west, the B field oscillates up and down vertically and has a frequency of 90.0 kHz and an rms strength of Determine the frequency and rms strength of the electric field. What is the direction of its oscillations?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long does it take light to reach us from the Sun,1.50 * 108 km away?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long should it take the voices of astronauts on the Moon to reach the Earth? Explain in detail.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
An EM wave has a wavelength of 720 nm. What is its frequency, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
An EM wave has frequency What is its wavelength, and how would we classify it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A widely used short-wave radio broadcast band is referred to as the 49-m band. What is the frequency of a 49-m radio signal?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(I) What is the frequency of a microwave whose wavelength is 1.50 cm?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Electromagnetic waves and sound waves can have the same frequency. (a) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave? (b) What is the wavelength of a 1.00-kHz sound wave? (The speed of sound in air is ) (c) Can you hear a 1.00-kHz electromagnetic wave?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(a) What is the wavelength of a radar signal? (b) What is the frequency of an X-ray with wavelength 0.12 nm
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How long would it take a message sent as radio waves from Earth to reach Mars when Mars is (a) nearest Earth, (b) farthest from Earth? Assume that Mars and Earth are in the same plane and that their orbits around the Sun are circles (Mars is from the Sun).
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Our nearest star (other than the Sun) is 4.2 light-years away. That is, it takes 4.2 years for the light it emits to reach Earth. How far away is it in meters?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A light-year is a measure of distance (not time). How many meters does light travel in a year?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Pulsed lasers used for science and medicine produce very brief bursts of electromagnetic energy. If the laser light wavelength is 1062 nm (NeodymiumYAG laser), and the pulse lasts for 34 picoseconds, how many wavelengths are found within the laser pulse? How brief would the pulse need to be to fit only one wavelength?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the minimum angular speed at which Michelsons eight-sided mirror would have had to rotate to reflect light into an observers eye by succeeding mirror faces (1 8 of a revolution, Fig. 2210)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A student wants to scale down Michelsons light-speed experiment to a size that will fit in one room. An eightsided mirror is available, and the stationary mirror can be mounted 12 m from the rotating mirror. If the arrangement is otherwise as shown in Fig. 2210, at what minimum rate must the mirror rotate?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The field in an EM wave has a peak of What is the average rate at which this wave carries energy across unit area per unit time?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The magnetic field in a traveling EM wave has an rms strength of 22.5 nT. How long does it take to deliver 365 J of energy to of a wall that it hits perpendicularly?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
How much energy is transported across a area per hour by an EM wave whose E field has an rms strength
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A spherically spreading EM wave comes from an 1800-W source. At a distance of 5.0 m, what is the intensity, and what is the rms value of the electric field?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the amplitude of the B field of an EM wave is (a) what is the amplitude of the E field? (b) What is the average power transported across unit area by the EM wave?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the average energy contained in a volume near the Earths surface due to radiant energy from the Sun? See Example 224.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A 15.8-mW laser puts out a narrow beam 2.40 mm in diameter. What are the rms values of E and B in the beam?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the average power output of the Sun, given that about reaches the upper atmosphere of the Earth
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) A high-energy pulsed laser emits a 1.0-ns-long pulse of average power \(1.5 \times 10^{11} \ \mathrm W\). The beam is nearly a cylinder \(2.2 \times 10^{-3} \ \mathrm m\) in radius. Determine (a) the energy delivered in each pulse, and (b) the rms value of the electric field.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the radiation pressure due to a bulb that emits 25 W of EM radiation at a distance of 9.5 cm from the center of the bulb. Estimate the force exerted on your fingertip if you place it at this point
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What size should the solar panel on a satellite orbiting Jupiter be if it is to collect the same amount of radiation from the Sun as a solar panel on a satellite orbiting Earth? [Hint: Assume the inverse square law (Eq. 1116b).]
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Suppose you have a car with a 100-hp engine. How large a solar panel would you need to replace the engine with solar power? Assume that the solar panels can utilize 20% of the maximum solar energy that reaches the Earths surface (1000 W m2
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the range of wavelengths for (a) FM radio (88 MHz to 108 MHz) and (b) AM radio (535 kHz to 1700 kHz)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the wavelength for a 1.9-GHz cell phone transmitter.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Compare 980 on the AM dial to 98.1 on FM. Which has the longer wavelength, and by what factor is it larger?
Read more -
Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What are the wavelengths for two TV channels that broadcast at 54.0 MHz (Channel 2) and 692 MHz (Channel 51)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The variable capacitor in the tuner of an AM radio has a capacitance of 2500 pF when the radio is tuned to a station at 550 kHz. What must the capacitance be for a station near the other end of the dial, 1610 kHz?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The oscillator of a 98.3-MHz FM station has an inductance of What value must the capacitance be?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(II) A certain FM radio tuning circuit has a fixed capacitor C = 810 pF. Tuning is done by a variable inductance. What range of values must the inductance have to tune stations from 88 MHz to 108 MHz?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
An amateur radio operator wishes to build a receiver that can tune a range from 14.0 MHz to 15.0 MHz. A variable capacitor has a minimum capacitance of 86 pF. (a) What is the required value of the inductance? (b) What is the maximum capacitance used on the variable capacitor?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A satellite beams microwave radiation with a power of 13 kW toward the Earths surface, 550 km away. When the beam strikes Earth, its circular diameter is about 1500 m. Find the rms electric field strength of the beam
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
(III) A 1.60-m-long FM antenna is oriented parallel to the electric field of an EM wave. How large must the electric field be to produce a 1.00-mV (rms) voltage between the ends of the antenna?What is the rate of energy transport per \(m^2\)?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Who will hear the voice of a singer first: a person in the balcony 50.0 m away from the stage (see Fig. 2221), or a person 1200 km away at home whose ear is next to the radio listening to a live broadcast? Roughly how much sooner? Assume the microphone is a few centimeters from the singer and the temperature is 20C.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A global positioning system (GPS) functions by determining the travel times for EM waves from various satellites to a land-based GPS receiver. If the receiver is to detect a change in travel distance on the order of 3 m, what is the associated change in travel time (in ns) that must be measured?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Light is emitted from an ordinary lightbulb filament in wavetrain bursts about in duration. What is the length in space of such wave trains?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The voice from an astronaut on the Moon (Fig. 2222) was beamed to a listening crowd on Earth. If you were standing 28 m from the loudspeaker on Earth, what was the total time lag between when you heard the sound and when the sound entered a microphone on the Moon? Explain whether the microphone was inside the space helmet, or outside, and why.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Radio-controlled clocks throughout the United States receive a radio signal from a transmitter in Fort Collins, Colorado, that accurately (within a microsecond) marks the beginning of each minute. A slight delay, however, is introduced because this signal must travel from the transmitter to the clocks. Assuming Fort Collins is no more than 3000 km from any point in the U.S., what is the longest travel-time delay?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
If the Sun were to disappear or radically change its output, how long would it take for us on Earth to learn about it?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Cosmic microwave background radiation fills space with an average energy density of about \(4 \times 10^{-14} J/m^3\). (a) Find the rms value of the electric field associated with this radiation. (b) How far from a 7.5-kW radio transmitter emitting uniformly in all directions would you find a comparable value?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
. What are and at a point 2.50 m from a light source whose output is 18 W? Assume the bulb emits radiation of a single frequency uniformly in all directions
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate the rms electric field in the sunlight that hits Mars, knowing that the Earth receives about and that Mars is 1.52 times farther from the Sun (on average) than is the Earth
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The average intensity of a particular TV stations signal is when it arrives at a 33-cm-diameter satellite TV antenna. (a) Calculate the total energy received by the antenna during 4.0 hours of viewing this stations programs. (b) Estimate the amplitudes of the E and B fields of the EM wave.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What length antenna would be appropriate for a portable device that could receive satellite TV?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A radio station is allowed to broadcast at an average power not to exceed 25 kW. If an electric field amplitude of is considered to be acceptable for receiving the radio transmission, estimate how many kilometers away you might be able to detect this station.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
The radiation pressure (Section 226) created by electromagnetic waves might someday be used to power spacecraft through the use of a solar sail, Example 226. (a) Assuming total reflection, what would be the pressure on a solar sail located at the same distance from the Sun as the Earth (where )? (b) Suppose the sail material has a mass of What would be the acceleration of the sail due to solar radiation pressure? (c) A realistic solar sail would have a payload. How big a sail would you need to accelerate a 100-kg payload at 1 x 103 ms2?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
. Suppose a 35-kW radio station emits EM waves uniformly in all directions. (a) How much energy per second crosses a area 1.0 km from the transmitting antenna? (b) What is the rms magnitude of the field at this point, assuming the station is operating at full power? What is the rms voltage induced in a 1.0-m-long vertical car antenna (c) 1.0 km away, (d) 50 km away?
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
A point source emits light energy uniformly in all directions at an average rate with a single frequency f. Show that the peak electric field in the wave is given by [Hint: The surface area of a sphere is .]
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
What is the maximum power level of a radio station so as to avoid electrical breakdown of air at a distance of 0.65 m from the transmitting antenna? Assume the antenna is a point source. Air breaks down in an electric field of about 3 * 106 Vm.
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
Estimate how long an AM antenna would have to be if it were (a) or (b) AM radio is roughly 1 MHz (530 kHz to 1.7 MHz).
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Chapter 22: Problem 22 Physics: Principles with Applications 7
12 km from a radio stations transmitting antenna, the amplitude of the electric field is What is the average power output of the radio station?
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