UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT DALLAS
ERIK JONSSON SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE
EE 4302
ELECTROMAGNETIC ENGINEERING II
PROF. C. D. CANTRELL
COURSE OUTLINE
TEXT:
Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics,
Third Edition, by Simon Ramo, John R. Whinnery and
Theodore Van Duzer
(John Wiley & Sons, 1994).
Dr. Ramo is the "R" in TRW, Inc.
TARGET AUDIENCES:
- This is an elective course for Junior or Senior undergraduate
students in Electrical Engineering.
- EE4301, Electromagnetic Engineering I, is a recommended prerequisite.
Students who have not yet taken EE4301 should discuss their readiness for
EE4302 with Dr. Cantrell before signing up.
- An understanding of the material in this course
is recommended for all students who intend to work in wireless
or fiberoptic communications engineering.
- Others who can benefit from this course include employees of local
high-technology companies who need an overview of the principles of
waveguides, resonators, and transmission lines.
CONCEPTS/TOOLS TO BE ACQUIRED IN THIS COURSE:
- Review of static electric fields
- Integral forms of the laws of electrostatics
- Coulomb's Law
- Gauss' Law
- Field lines
- Capacitance
- Differential forms of the laws of electrostatics
- Gradient and divergence
- Laplace's and Poisson's equations
- Static fields due to steady currents
- Boundary conditions
- Special techniques
- Method of images
- Visualization of fields
- Numerical solutions
- Electrostatic field energy
- Review of static magnetic fields
- Integral forms of the laws of magnetostatics
- Ampere's Law
- Line integral of magnetic field
- Inductance from flux linkages
- Differential forms of the laws of magnetostatics
- Curl
- Vector potential
- Hertz vector potentials
- Boundary conditions
- Magnetic field energy
- Review of Maxwell's Equations
- Integral and differential forms for time-varying fields
- Examples
- Electromagnetic treatment of circuits
- Review of transmission lines
- Review of propagation, reflection and refraction of plane waves
- Boundary-value problems
- Numerical treatment
- Classical treatment
- Separation of variables
- Cylindrical coordinates; Bessel functions
- Spherical coordinates; spherical Bessel functions
and spherical harmonics
- Cylindrical waveguides
- Special types of waveguides
- Resonant cavities
- Radiation and scattering
- Propagation in anisotropic media
- Optics
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