I was just trying to understand how it could relate to what I thought was the total energy of an EM wave, that apparently isn't related.
You seem to be thinking that the energy in the wave is related to the vector sum of the amplitudes of the E and B components, but you have refused to be drawn as to your reasoning so I cannot be sure. If so, then you have been trying to relate a correct answer to an incorrect one. Not a useful exercise.
All that stuff about dimensional analysis is to get you used to checking your own work, so you are less reliant on asking others.
Please read: Energy carried in an EM wave.
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/waves/emwv.html
... compare with how you've been thinking.
The Poynting vector, for instance, is ##\vec S = \vec E\times\vec H##
That's a good question actually, I never considered it, I suppose I was interpreting it as being an area perpendicular to the direction of propagation, i.e the plane which both B and E oscillate. Umm, I wasn't aware where they came from was important, say, a dipole?
I chose a second to meet the same units on the LHS, as Nhbarω
as is in Watts per square meter, which is per second.
i.e. you picked those particular dimensions without thinking about what they are for. You seem to be having trouble thinking of a physical property without the units.
To get the correct dimensions - you would take an energy, then divide by area and time.
Thus any equation of form: $$I=\frac{U}{At}$$ will work.
But to make sense we have to say that energy U has accumulated in time t over an irradiated area A. [*]
In SI units, that would be W.m
-2 - but I can use other units if I like.
Notice how there is no need to specify a particular area and a particular time?
However, in real life, the energy U need not have arrived at a constant rate, and need not be distributed evenly over the area A ... so the calculation is actually for an
average. This is why the standard derivations talk the way they do.
Yes you're right, it is an habbit worth kicking, but when you say "not joules, energy" do you mean 'well it is Joules but that has a context of energy in some form, think about what the form represents'?
No - "Joules" is a man-made construct that we use to mark out the dial on our energy-meters. "Energy" is what Nature does - it is the real thing, the thing that we are measuring. We do not measure Joules, we measure energy. Just like we do not measure meters, we measure distance; we do not measure kilograms, we measure mass; we do not measure seconds, we measure time; etc.
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[*] ... the definitions of the variable has to be relevant.
For instance, the power dissipated by a resistor is ##V^2/R##, so $$I=\frac{V^2}{AR}$$ has the correct dimensions ... but what area should we use for A? The area of the circuit board? The area of the ceiling of the lab? Maybe the surface area of the resistor would make sense right?
Having decided that you will take the voltage across the resistor, square it, divide by the product of the resistance and the surface area of the resistor, then you have just calculated an intensity ... but what is it the intensity of?
This is what I mean about where something comes from being important.
This sort of thing is absolutely paramount for an
engineer btw!