EmilyRuck
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Hello!
Promising that I will not make other new questions in the next days
, I have a doubt about the meaning of a pair of expressions.
Sommerfeld's conditions for an electromagnetic field produced by a finite source bounded by a finite volume are:
\lim_{r \to +\infty} r|\mathbf{E}| < q\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r|\mathbf{H}| < q\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r \left[\mathbf{E} - \eta \mathbf{H} \times \mathbf{\hat{u}}_k \right] = 0\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r \left[\mathbf{H} - \displaystyle \frac{\mathbf{\hat{u}}_k \times \mathbf{E}}{\eta} \right] = 0
where q are finite quantities, \eta is the wave impedance in the considered medium (for example the free space), \mathbf{\hat{u}}_k is the direction of propagation and r is the distance from the source.
The first two state that the fields' module must decrease at least as 1/r.
The last two state that the fields must be similar to those of a plane wave: they must be mutually orthogonal and also both orhogonal to the direction of propagation. Moreover, the "part" of \mathbf{E} (in the first) and \mathbf{H} (in the second) which does not contribute to that plane wave must decrease at least as 1/r^2.
Why these last two conditions are called "radiation conditions"? As a matter of fact, in the electric dipole non-radiative field components decrease as 1/r^2 or 1/r^3. But why this is a necessary requirement to build a "radiation"? Couldn't we have a not-radiating component which decreases as 1/r? Why?
Thank you, again, for having read.
Emily
Promising that I will not make other new questions in the next days

Sommerfeld's conditions for an electromagnetic field produced by a finite source bounded by a finite volume are:
\lim_{r \to +\infty} r|\mathbf{E}| < q\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r|\mathbf{H}| < q\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r \left[\mathbf{E} - \eta \mathbf{H} \times \mathbf{\hat{u}}_k \right] = 0\\<br /> \lim_{r \to +\infty} r \left[\mathbf{H} - \displaystyle \frac{\mathbf{\hat{u}}_k \times \mathbf{E}}{\eta} \right] = 0
where q are finite quantities, \eta is the wave impedance in the considered medium (for example the free space), \mathbf{\hat{u}}_k is the direction of propagation and r is the distance from the source.
The first two state that the fields' module must decrease at least as 1/r.
The last two state that the fields must be similar to those of a plane wave: they must be mutually orthogonal and also both orhogonal to the direction of propagation. Moreover, the "part" of \mathbf{E} (in the first) and \mathbf{H} (in the second) which does not contribute to that plane wave must decrease at least as 1/r^2.
Why these last two conditions are called "radiation conditions"? As a matter of fact, in the electric dipole non-radiative field components decrease as 1/r^2 or 1/r^3. But why this is a necessary requirement to build a "radiation"? Couldn't we have a not-radiating component which decreases as 1/r? Why?
Thank you, again, for having read.
Emily