View Full Version : Dipole and a detector
stunner5000pt
Mar21-08, 02:49 PM
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data
A detector hjaving a radius 10 cm is placed 1 m away from an electric dipole. What fraction of total solid angle does the detector cover and what fraction of total dipole power does it detect (assuming 100% detection efficiency)
2. The attempt at a solution
I drew the diagram as well maybe that will help. In any case, i think the detector will make a cone (?) with the dipole.Since the base of this triangle has radius of 0.1 m and the height of the triangle is 1m, the apex angle is 5.7 degrees or 57\pi/180
the total angle swept by the triangle is thus
\int_{0}^{2\pi}\int_{0}^{5.7\pi/180}\sin\theta\ d \theta d\phi = \frac{5.7\pi}{90}
the total angle swept by a sphere is 4pi so the fraction is simply the answer above divided by 4pi. Is that correct?
StatusX
Mar21-08, 05:08 PM
You set up the integral correctly, but I get (I find it nice to work exactly when possible, although you'll have to round eventually anyway, so this isn't really that worth it)
\int_{0}^{2\pi}\int_{0}^{\theta_o}\sin\theta\ d \theta d\phi = 2 \pi \left( -\cos \theta |_0^{\theta_o} \right) = 2\pi(1 - \cos\theta_o)
Or using \theta_o = \tan^{-1} (0.1):
0.1 = \tan \theta_o = \frac{\sin \theta_o}{\cos \theta_o} = \frac{\sqrt{1-\cos^2 \theta_o}}{\cos \theta_o}
\Rightarrow \cos \theta_o = \frac{1}{\sqrt{ (0.1)^2 + 1 } }
So the integral becomes:
2\pi \left(1 - \frac{1}{\sqrt{ (0.1)^2 + 1 } } \right) \approx 0.00993 \pi
For a solid angle of (dividing by 4\pi, as you say) .00248
Usually, though, it suffices to approximate the solid angle by taking the area of object and dividing by 4\pi r^2, where r is its distance from the dipole. This ignores the curvature of the sphere, and so is not exact, but is usually a good approximation. In this case, you would get \pi(0.1)^2/4 \pi (1)^2 = 0.0025, which is slightly off, but not too bad for most purposes.
stunner5000pt
Mar21-08, 10:53 PM
You set up the integral correctly, but I get (I find it nice to work exactly when possible, although you'll have to round eventually anyway, so this isn't really that worth it)
\int_{0}^{2\pi}\int_{0}^{\theta_o}\sin\theta\ d \theta d\phi = 2 \pi \left( -\cos \theta |_0^{\theta_o} \right) = 2\pi(1 - \cos\theta_o)
Or using \theta_o = \tan^{-1} (0.1):
0.1 = \tan \theta_o = \frac{\sin \theta_o}{\cos \theta_o} = \frac{\sqrt{1-\cos^2 \theta_o}}{\cos \theta_o}
\Rightarrow \cos \theta_o = \frac{1}{\sqrt{ (0.1)^2 + 1 } }
So the integral becomes:
2\pi \left(1 - \frac{1}{\sqrt{ (0.1)^2 + 1 } } \right) \approx 0.00993 \pi
For a solid angle of (dividing by 4\pi, as you say) .00248
Usually, though, it suffices to approximate the solid angle by taking the area of object and dividing by 4\pi r^2, where r is its distance from the dipole. This ignores the curvature of the sphere, and so is not exact, but is usually a good approximation. In this case, you would get \pi(0.1)^2/4 \pi (1)^2 = 0.0025, which is slightly off, but not too bad for most purposes.
Thanks a lot
Ok now for the fraction of total dipole power detected (assuming 100% detection efficiency)
the total dipole power detected is given by \frac{dP}{d\Omega}=\frac{q^2 a^2}{2\pi c^3}\sin^2\theta
So i need to integrate the above expression w.r.t. omega?
P = \frac{q^2 a^2}{4\pi c^3} \int_{0}^{2\pi}\int^{\theta_{0}}_{0}\sin^3\theta d\theta d\phi
here theta zero is the angle calculated in the first section??
Is that correct?
I am working in CGS units so the formulas will look like their SI counterparts (obviously)
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