Electromagnetic wave... How is it getting transmitted?

AI Thread Summary
Electromagnetic (EM) waves consist of mutually perpendicular electric and magnetic oscillations, which can propagate through space despite diminishing strength with distance. The electric and magnetic fields decrease as 1/R, causing the power density to fall off as 1/R², where R is the distance from the source. Although EM waves carry energy, they do not represent perpetual energy, as energy is conserved and simply transforms rather than disappearing. The electric field of a unit charge theoretically extends to infinity, similar to how light from the sun reaches Earth. Understanding these principles clarifies the nature of EM wave transmission and energy conservation.
jijopaul
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I've heard that em wave consists of mutually perpendicular electric & magnetic oscillations.

Imagine that I've a unit charge at any point in space. Associated with this charge, there exists an electric field which diminishes with distance from the charge. If we set forth an oscillation in this field, it can get transmitted. But since the field strength is getting diminished wrt distance, How can the oscillation get transmitted indefinitely?
 
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The radiated wave does get weaker as it propagates away from its source. For your case, the electric and magnetic fields both off as ##\frac{1}{R}##, so the power density falls off as ##\frac{1}{R^2}##. Here ##R## is the distance from your oscillating charge to the point at which you are observing the wave.

jason
 
As a follow up question, can an EM wave be considered a form of perpetual energy? I 'know' instinctively that this cannot be true, but I don't know why.
 
jasonRF said:
The radiated wave does get weaker as it propagates away from its source. For your case, the electric and magnetic fields both off as ##\frac{1}{R}##, so the power density falls off as ##\frac{1}{R^2}##. Here ##R## is the distance from your oscillating charge to the point at which you are observing the wave.

jason
For how much length the electric field of a unit charge exist?
Light reaches from sun to Earth after traveling that much distance. You mean to say that the electric field of the sun extends up to the distances where its light can reach?
 
Burnerjack said:
As a follow up question, can an EM wave be considered a form of perpetual energy? I 'know' instinctively that this cannot be true, but I don't know why.

Sure. Until the EM wave interacts with something, it will always have some amount of energy. The phrase 'perpetual energy' is mostly meaningless though. Energy is conserved, so it never disappears, but just gets transferred around and changes form. This is in contrast to a 'Perpetual Motion Machine'. A machine is basically a device that moves energy around. Adding 'perpetual motion' implies that the machine can run forever, performing work without expending energy. This is impossible.

jijopaul said:
For how much length the electric field of a unit charge exist?
Light reaches from sun to Earth after traveling that much distance. You mean to say that the electric field of the sun extends up to the distances where its light can reach?

The EM field from any object extends to infinity.
 
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