teroenza said:
Homework Statement
I am trying to understand why, in an example in Griffiths E&M (3rd ed, 8.1) says that the Poynting vector of a current carrying wire that is being heated via resistance (Joule heating), has a Poynting vector pointing radially inward. The E field is parallel to the wire, B field is circumferential with the right hand rule.
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I believe that the Poynting vector points in the direction of energy flow, and in the direction of the EM wave. But if the wire is radiating heat due to Joule heating, I just don't get why the Poynting vector is radially in, and not radially out. This should be so simple...
P =
E x
H
You have the directions of
E and
H inside the wire correct. Think of looking at a flat cross-section (hold the wire vertically and imagine having made the front half transparent). Let the current flow in direction
j so
E = E
j, then
H= +H
k looking at the left hand side of the wire but
H = -
k looking at the right-hand side. You also know that the
H field increases in magnitude as we move from the axis to the surface.
So
P =
E x
H gives a
P field that points to the right from the left-hand side (+
i direction) and to the left from the right-hand side (-
i direction), diminishing in magnitude as the axis is approached from either side.
Wish I were good at drawing but I'm not, hope you can visualize.
EDIT: energy is supplied by the external e-m field and flows into the conductor to supply resistance losses in the conductor, so as the
P field approaches the axis the energy loss approaches zero and so does the
P field.
If the wire were a perfect conductor there would be no radial
P vector in the wire. No resistance loss, no radial P vector.