|
Electromagnetic Radiation |
Properties and
behavior
Scattering, reflection, and refraction
If a charged particle interacts with
an electromagnetic wave, it experiences a force proportional to the strength
of the electric field and thus is forced to change its motion in accordance
with the frequency of the electric field wave. In doing so, it becomes a
source of electromagnetic radiation of the same frequency, as described in
the previous section. The energy for the work done in accelerating the
charged particle and emitting this secondary radiation comes from and is
lost by the primary wave. This process is called scattering.
Since the energy density of the
electromagnetic radiation is proportional to the square of the electric
field strength and the field strength is caused by acceleration of a charge,
the energy radiated by such a charge oscillator increases with the square of
the acceleration. On the other hand, the acceleration of an oscillator
depends on the frequency of the back-and-forth oscillation. The acceleration
increases with the square of the frequency. This leads to the important
result that the electromagnetic energy radiated by an oscillator increases
very rapidly--namely, with the square of the square or, as one says, with
the fourth power of the frequency. Doubling the frequency thus produces an
increase in radiated energy by a factor of 16.
This rapid increase in scattering with
the frequency of electromagnetic radiation can be seen on any sunny day: it
is the reason the sky is blue and the setting Sun is red. The
higher-frequency blue light from the Sun is scattered much more by the atoms
and molecules of the Earth's atmosphere than is the lower-frequency red
light. Hence the light of the setting Sun, which passes through a thick
layer of atmosphere, has much more red than yellow or blue light, while
light scattered from the sky contains much more blue than yellow or red
light.
The process of scattering, or
reradiating part of the electromagnetic wave by a charge oscillator, is
fundamental to understanding the interaction of electromagnetic radiation
with solids, liquids, or any matter that contains a very large number of
charges and thus an enormous number of charge oscillators. This also
explains why a substance that has charge oscillators of certain frequencies
absorbs and emits radiation of those frequencies.
When electromagnetic radiation falls
on a large collection of individual small charge oscillators, as in a piece
of glass or metal or a brick wall, all of these oscillators perform
oscillations in unison, following the beat of the electric wave. As a
result, all the oscillators emit secondary radiation in unison (or
coherently), and the total secondary radiation coming from the solid
consists of the sum of all these secondary coherent electromagnetic waves.
This sum total yields radiation that is reflected from the surface of the
solid and radiation that goes into the solid at a certain angle with respect
to the normal of (i.e., a line perpendicular to) the surface. The latter is
the refracted radiation that may be attenuated (absorbed) on its way through
the solid.
|