000 04340cam a22003738i 4500
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008 180301s2018 flu s 000 0 eng
010 _a 2018010134
020 _a9781498796569 (hardback : alk. paper)
020 _z9781351057554 (ebook : alk. paper)
035 _a20382595
040 _aDLC
_beng
_erda
_cDLC
042 _apcc
050 0 0 _aQC670
_b.R693 2018
082 0 0 _a530.14/1
_223
100 1 _aRothwell, Edward J.,
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aElectromagnetics /
_cEdward J. Rothwell and Michael J. Cloud.
250 _aThird edition.
263 _a1807
264 1 _aBoca Raton :
_bCRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group,
_c2018.
300 _axxv, 979 pages :
_billustrations.
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_2rdacarrier
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _a1 Introductory concepts1.1 Notation, conventions, and symbology1.2 The field concept of electromagnetics1.3 The sources of the electromagnetic field1.4 Problems2 Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism2.1 The postulate2.2 The well-posed nature of the postulate 2.3 Maxwell's equations in moving frames2.4 The Maxwell-Boffi equations2.5 Large-scale form of Maxwell's equations2.6 The nature of the four field quantities2.7 Maxwell's equations with magnetic sources2.8 Boundary (jump) conditions2.9 Fundamental theorems 2.10 The wave nature of the electromagnetic field2.11 Application: single charged particle motion in static electric and magnetic fields2.12 Problems3 The static and quasistatic electromagnetic fields3.1 Statics and quasistatics3.2 Static fields and steady currents3.3 Electrostatics3.4 Magnetostatics3.5 Static field theorems3.6 Quasistatics 3.7 Application: electromagnetic shielding3.8 Problems4 Temporal and spatial frequency domain representation4.1 Interpretation of the temporal transform4.2 The frequency-domain Maxwell equations4.3 Boundary conditions on the frequency-domain fields4.4 The constitutive and Kramers-Kronig relations4.5 Dissipated and stored energy in a dispersive medium4.6 Some simple models for constitutive parameters4.7 Monochromatic fields and the phasor domain4.8 Poynting's theorem for time-harmonic fields4.9 The complex Poynting theorem4.10 Fundamental theorems for time-harmonic fields4.11 The wave nature of the time-harmonic EM field4.12 Interpretation of the spatial transform4.13 Spatial Fourier decomposition4.14 Periodic fields and Floquet's theorem4.15 Application: electromagnetic characterization of materials4.16 Problems5 Field decompositions and the EM potentials5.1 Spatial symmetry decompositions5.2 Solenoidal-lamellar decomposition and the electromagnetic potentials5.3 Transverse-longitudinal decomposition5.4 TE-TM decomposition5.5 Solenoidal-lamellar decomposition of solutions to the vector wave equation and the vector spherical wave functions5.6 Application: guided waves and transmission lines5.7 Problems6 Integral solutions of Maxwell's equations6.1 Vector Kirchhoff solution6.2 Fields in an unbounded medium6.3 Fields in a bounded, source-free region6.4 Application: antennas6.5 Problems7 Integral equations in electromagnetics7.1 A brief overview of integral equations7.2 Plane-wave reflection from an inhomogeneous region7.3 Solution to problems involving thin wires7.4 Solution to problems involving two-dimensional conductors7.5 Scattering by a penetrable cylinder7.6 Apertures in ground planes7.7 Application: electromagnetic shielding revisited7.8 ProblemsAppendix A Mathematical appendixA.1 Conservative Vector FieldsA.2 The Fourier transformA.3 Vector transport theoremsA.4 Dyadic analysisA.5 Boundary value problemsAppendix B Useful identitiesAppendix C Fourier transform pairsAppendix D Coordinate systemsAppendix E Properties of special functionsE.1 Bessel functionsE.2 Legendre functionsE.3 Spherical harmonicsAppendix F Derivation of an integral identity.
650 0 _aElectromagnetic theory.
650 0 _aMagnets.
700 1 _aCloud, Michael J.,
_eauthor.
856 _uhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1-BHMdHtEAi6_JS0y4rEhuXuroE6nZQp_/view?usp=sharing
999 _c10055
_d10055