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Next: Electromagnetic Waves Up: Waves Previous: Sound Waves

Spherical Waves

The utility of thinking of $\Vec{k}$ as a ``ray'' becomes even more obvious when we get away from plane waves and start thinking of waves with curved wavefronts. The simplest such wave is the type that is emitted when a pebble is tossed into a still pool - an example of the ``point source'' that radiates waves isotropically in all directions. The wavefronts are then circles in two dimensions (the surface of the pool) or spheres in three dimensions (as for sound waves) separated by one wavelength $\lambda$ and heading outward from the source at the propagation velocity c. In this case the ``rays'' k point along the radius vector $\Hat{r}$ from the source at any position and we can once again write down a rather simple formula for the ``wave function'' (displacement A as a function of position) that depends only on the time t and the scalar distance r from the source.

A plausible first guess would be just   $ A(x,t) \; = \; A_0 \; e^{i(k r - \omega t)}$,  but this cannot be right! Why not? Because it violates energy conservation. The energy density stored in a wave is proportional to the square of its amplitude; in the trial solution above, the amplitude of the outgoing spherical wavefront is constant as a function or r, but the area of that wavefront increases as r2. Thus the energy in the wavefront increases as r2? I think not. We can get rid of this effect by just dividing the amplitude by r (which divides the energy density by r2). Thus a trial solution is

 \begin{displaymath}\mbox{
\fbox{ \rule[-1.25\baselineskip]{0pt}{3\baselineskip} . . . 
 . . .  \; = \; A_0 \; { e^{i(k r - \omega t)} \over r } .
}$ ~
} }
\end{displaymath} (14.38)

which is, as usual, correct.14.11 We won't use this equation for anything right now, but it is interesting to know that it does accurately describe an outgoing14.12 spherical wave.

The perceptive reader will have noticed by now that Eq. (38) is not a solution to the WAVE EQUATION as represented in one dimension by Eq. (10). That is hardly surprising, since the spherical wave solution is an intrinsically 3-dimensional beast; what happened to y and z? The correct vector form of the WAVE EQUATION is

 \begin{displaymath}\mbox{
\fbox{ \rule[-1.25\baselineskip]{0pt}{3\baselineskip} . . . 
 . . . 2} \;
{\partial^2 A \over \partial t^2} \; = \; 0
}$ ~
} }
\end{displaymath} (14.39)

where the LAPLACIAN operator  $\nabla^2$  can be expressed in Cartesian14.13 coordinates (x,y,z) as14.14

 \begin{displaymath}\nabla^2 \; = \; {\partial^2 \over \partial x^2}
\; + \; {\ . . . 
 . . . over \partial y^2}
\; + \; {\partial^2 \over \partial z^2} .
\end{displaymath} (14.40)

With a little patient effort you can show that Eq. (38) does indeed satisfy Eq. (39), if you remember that   $r = \sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2}$. Or you can just take my word for it . . . .


next up previous
Next: Electromagnetic Waves Up: Waves Previous: Sound Waves
Jess H. Brewer
1998-11-06