next up previous contents index
Next: The TE Field Up: System of Partial Differential Previous: The Electric and the   Contents   Index

Cylindrical Coordinates

The benefits of the linear algebra viewpoint applied to Maxwell's equations can be extended by inspection from rectilinear cartesian to cylindrical coordinates. This is because the four-dimensional coordinate system lends itself to being decomposed into two orthogonal sets of coordinate surfaces. For cylindricals these are spanned by the transverse coordinates $ (r,\theta )$ in the transverse plane, and the longitudinal coordinates $ (z,t)$ in the longitudinal plane.

The transition from a rectilinear to a cylindrical coordinate frame is based on the replacement of the following symbols:

$\displaystyle dx \longrightarrow dr\quad$ $\displaystyle ; \quad dy \longrightarrow rd\theta$ (677)
$\displaystyle \frac{\partial}{\partial x}\longrightarrow \frac{\partial}{\partial r} \quad$ $\displaystyle ;\quad \frac{\partial}{\partial y}\longrightarrow \frac{1}{r}\frac{\partial}{\partial \theta}$ (678)

and


$\displaystyle \frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2} +\frac{\partial^2}{\partial y^2}$ $\displaystyle \longrightarrow \frac{1}{r} \frac{\partial}{\partial r} r \frac{\partial}{\partial r}+ \frac{1}{r^2}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial \theta^2}~.$ (679)

Such a replacement yields the vector field components relative to an orthonormal (o.n.) basis tangent to the coordinate lines. To emphasize this orthonormality, hats ($ \hat~$ ) are placed over the vector components.

This replacement is very powerful. It circumvents the necessity of having to repeat the previous calculations that went into exhibiting the individual components of Maxwell's $ TE$ , $ TM$ , and $ TEM$ systems of equations. We shall again take advantage of the power of this algorithm in the next section when we apply it to Maxwell's system relative to spherical coordinates.

Applying it within the context of cylindrical coordinates, one finds that the source and the vector potential four-vectors are as follows:

  1. for a $ TE$ source

    $\displaystyle (\rho,\hat J_z,\hat J_r,\hat J_\theta)=\left( 0,0, \frac{1}{r}\fr...
...partial S^{TE}}{\partial \theta}, - \frac{\partial S^{TE}}{\partial r} \right),$ (680)

    the solution to the Maxwell field equations has the form

    $\displaystyle (\phi,\hat A_z,\hat A_r,\hat A_\theta)=\left(0,0, \frac{1}{r}\fra...
...l \Phi^{TE}}{\partial \theta}, - \frac{\partial \Phi^{TE}}{\partial r} \right);$ (681)

  2. for a $ TM$ source

    $\displaystyle (\rho,\hat J_z,\hat J_r,\hat J_\theta)=\left( -\frac{\partial S^{TM}}{\partial z}, \frac{\partial S^{TM}}{\partial t},0,0 \right),$ (682)

    the solution to the Maxwell field equations has the form

    $\displaystyle (\phi,\hat A_z,\hat A_r,\hat A_\theta)=\left( -\frac{\partial \Phi^{TM}}{\partial z}, \frac{\partial \Phi^{TM}}{\partial t},0,0 \right);$ (683)

    and
  3. for a $ TEM$ source

    $\displaystyle (\rho,\hat J_z,\hat J_r,\hat J_\theta) =\left( -\frac{\partial J^...
...I^{~}}{\partial r}, \frac{1}{r}\frac{\partial I^{~}}{\partial \theta}, \right),$ (684)

    the solution to the Maxwell field equations has the form

    $\displaystyle (\phi,\hat A_z,\hat A_r,\hat A_\theta)=\left( -\frac{\partial \Ph...
...l \Psi}{\partial r}, \frac{1}{r} \frac{\partial \Psi}{\partial \theta} \right).$ (685)

The corresponding electromagnetic fields and their master scalar wave equations are then as follows:



Subsections
next up previous contents index
Next: The TE Field Up: System of Partial Differential Previous: The Electric and the   Contents   Index
Ulrich Gerlach 2007-04-05