Does the Imaginary Part of an EM-Wave Determine Its Phase?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Niles
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Complex Phase
Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the relationship between the imaginary part of an electromagnetic (EM) wave and its phase. The original poster questions the validity of a statement made by their lecturer regarding the measurability and significance of the imaginary part in determining phase.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the definition of phase in the context of EM waves, questioning the interpretation of the imaginary part as synonymous with phase. Some discuss the implications of measuring the imaginary part and its relationship to the real part through mathematical transformations.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the concepts, offering various interpretations and clarifications. There is a recognition of ambiguity in the original statement, and some participants suggest more precise formulations regarding the relationship between the imaginary and real parts of the wave. Guidance has been provided on the mathematical relationships involved, but no consensus has been reached.

Contextual Notes

There are discussions about the limitations of measuring the imaginary part directly and the formal nature of its role in wave propagation. The conversation also touches on the relevance of Kramers-Kronig relations and Hilbert transforms in this context.

Niles
Messages
1,834
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


Hi

My lecturer today mentioned today that the imaginary part of an EM-wave gives the phase of it. I can't quite understand this statement, considering the imginary part of an EM-wave is not something we can measure. Was he right?

Thanks in advance.


Niles.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi Niles! :smile:
Niles said:
My lecturer today mentioned today that the imaginary part of an EM-wave gives the phase of it.

Yes, "the imaginary part" and "ei(phase)" are synonymous.
… the imginary part of an EM-wave is not something we can measure.

Yes we can … think fringes etc. :wink:
 
tiny-tim said:
Yes, "the imaginary part" and "ei(phase)" are synonymous.

Hi, thanks for answering. When I hear phase, then I associate it with θ in
[tex] E = E_0e^{i(\omega t + \theta)}[/tex]
With this definition of the phase, then I guess the imaginary part of E cannot be regarded as the phase?
 
Niles said:
... the imaginary part of an EM-wave gives the phase of it.
"gives" is ambiguous in this context. I would give your instructor the benefit of the doubt. Perhaps a more thorough/complete statement would be:
The comparison of the imaginary part to the real part gives the phase as
Code:
phase = arctan( Im{amplitude} / Re{amplitude})

Niles said:
I can't quite understand this statement, considering the imginary part of an EM-wave is not something we can measure.
The imaginary part can't be measured directly in the sense of comparison to a real-valued standard, of course, but it does have physical consequences. It is not so much measureable as formal: something that allows you to frame the wave propagation in a beautifully elegant formalism (that has more profound consequences in quantum theory).
 
Hi Niles! :smile:
Niles said:
When I hear phase, then I associate it with θ in
[tex] E = E_0e^{i(\omega t + \theta)}[/tex]

yes, that's really the phase difference

the difference between the phase of that and of [itex]E = E_0e^{i\omega t}[/itex] …

but we shorten "phase difference" to "phase" in the same way as eg we often shorten "height difference" to "height" :wink:
 
To be more precise, the imaginary part is uniquely determined by the real part through a Hilbert transform, and they form something called a complex analytic signal that is equivalent but easier to work with. So yes you can measure the imag part, but only indirectly.
 
tiny-tim said:
Hi Niles! :smile:
yes, that's really the phase difference

the difference between the phase of that and of [itex]E = E_0e^{i\omega t}[/itex] …

but we shorten "phase difference" to "phase" in the same way as eg we often shorten "height difference" to "height" :wink:
Thanks! So I guess my professor wasn't 100% right when saying that hte phase difference θ is merely the imaginary part of the EM-wave (see Turin's answer).


sunjin09 said:
To be more precise, the imaginary part is uniquely determined by the real part through a Hilbert transform, and they form something called a complex analytic signal that is equivalent but easier to work with. So yes you can measure the imag part, but only indirectly.
Great, thanks. I guess you are referring to the Kramers-Kronig relations?


turin said:
"gives" is ambiguous in this context. I would give your instructor the benefit of the doubt. Perhaps a more thorough/complete statement would be:
The comparison of the imaginary part to the real part gives the phase as
Code:
phase = arctan( Im{amplitude} / Re{amplitude})

The imaginary part can't be measured directly in the sense of comparison to a real-valued standard, of course, but it does have physical consequences. It is not so much measureable as formal: something that allows you to frame the wave propagation in a beautifully elegant formalism (that has more profound consequences in quantum theory).
Thanks for that, that cleared things for me!
 
I was convinced that Kramers-Kronig relations are closely related, but are not the same as Hilbert transforms, but I don't know what the subtle difference is. In this situation, I think Hilbert transform is more appropriate, since we're only looking at the real t axis, not the complex z=iwt plane.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
9
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
4K
Replies
5
Views
3K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
5K