Electromagnetic Induction Phenomena
โ Scribed by Professor Dr. David Schieber (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 306
- Series
- Springer Series in Electrophysics 16
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From an engineering perspective, Electrodynamics is the province of two culยญ tures. The most easily identified of the two is primarily concerned with pheยญ nomena in which the propagation of electromagnetic waves is crucial. Includยญ ed are the designers of microwave circuits, of antennae and of many-waveยญ length communication channels. The interests of the second group focus on dynamical processes associated with the evolution of field sources, whether these be electrons and holes migrating in a semiconductor, or currents diffusยญ ing in a moving metal. Because the second culture is primarily concerned with the interaction beยญ tween electromagnetic fields and media, where the latter are often responsible for the dominant dynamical processes, it addresses applications that are more widely ranging. A few from a very long list would include electrostatic printยญ ing, rotating machines, power transmission apparatus, the electromagnetics of biological systems and physical electronics. Whether by nature or by deยญ sign, the phenomena of interest are generally electro quasi static or magnetoยญ quasistatic in this second branch of electrodynamics. It is tempting to say that the two branches of electrodynamics can be distinguished by the frequency range, but electron-beam and microwave-magnetic devices, with their respecยญ tive plasma oscillations and spin waves, are examples where the frequencies can be in the GHz range while the fundamental interactions are quasistatic. By design, so also are those that determine the frequency response of a transistor.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XII
Introduction....Pages 1-22
Principles of Magneto-Electric Interactions....Pages 23-118
Electromagnetic Induction: Steady-State โ Stationary Configurations....Pages 119-163
Electromagnetic Induction: Transient Phenomena โ Stationary Configuration....Pages 164-229
Dynamic Phenomena....Pages 230-281
Back Matter....Pages 283-296
โฆ Subjects
Optics and Electrodynamics;Electronics and Microelectronics, Instrumentation
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