EmilyRuck
- 134
- 6
Hello everybody!
I read that if one of the two materials involved in Snell's law is a conductor, the refraction angle \theta_r is about \pi / 2 and is independent of the incident angle \theta_i (I think \theta_r will be precisely \pi / 2 if the conductor is ideal). My question is: why?
\theta_i and \theta_r are real quantities. The only other variables are the refractive indexes. How is the refractive index in a conductor? I found that we could write \epsilon from the IV Maxwell's equation such that it includes the conduction:
\nabla \times \mathbf{H} = j \omega \mathbf{D} + \mathbf{J} = j \omega \epsilon \mathbf{E} + \sigma \mathbf{E} =
= j \omega \epsilon ' \mathbf{E} + (\omega \epsilon '' + \sigma) \mathbf{E} =
= j \omega \left( \epsilon ' - j \epsilon '' - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega} \right) \mathbf{E}
So \left( \epsilon ' - j \epsilon '' - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega} \right) is a new complex dielectric constant; its imaginary part takes into account the conduction. We can still write
\epsilon = \epsilon_0 \epsilon_r
by considering
\epsilon_r = \displaystyle \frac{\epsilon '}{\epsilon_0} - j \frac{\epsilon ''}{\epsilon_0} - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega \epsilon_0}
Now the refractive index is n_2 = \sqrt{\epsilon_r} and is complex. But how it must be to generate in the Snell's law a \theta_r = \pi / 2, despite of \theta_i?
\displaystyle \frac{n_1}{n_2} = \frac{\sin \theta_r}{\sin \theta_i}
n_1 is the refractive index of a dielectric. If | \epsilon '' + \sigma / \omega | \gg \epsilon ' (this happens in a good conductor), we will have n_2 \gg n_1 and
\sin \theta_r \simeq 0
while I expected \sin \theta_r \simeq 1. What's wrong?
Thank you anyway!
Emily
I read that if one of the two materials involved in Snell's law is a conductor, the refraction angle \theta_r is about \pi / 2 and is independent of the incident angle \theta_i (I think \theta_r will be precisely \pi / 2 if the conductor is ideal). My question is: why?
\theta_i and \theta_r are real quantities. The only other variables are the refractive indexes. How is the refractive index in a conductor? I found that we could write \epsilon from the IV Maxwell's equation such that it includes the conduction:
\nabla \times \mathbf{H} = j \omega \mathbf{D} + \mathbf{J} = j \omega \epsilon \mathbf{E} + \sigma \mathbf{E} =
= j \omega \epsilon ' \mathbf{E} + (\omega \epsilon '' + \sigma) \mathbf{E} =
= j \omega \left( \epsilon ' - j \epsilon '' - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega} \right) \mathbf{E}
So \left( \epsilon ' - j \epsilon '' - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega} \right) is a new complex dielectric constant; its imaginary part takes into account the conduction. We can still write
\epsilon = \epsilon_0 \epsilon_r
by considering
\epsilon_r = \displaystyle \frac{\epsilon '}{\epsilon_0} - j \frac{\epsilon ''}{\epsilon_0} - j \displaystyle \frac{\sigma}{\omega \epsilon_0}
Now the refractive index is n_2 = \sqrt{\epsilon_r} and is complex. But how it must be to generate in the Snell's law a \theta_r = \pi / 2, despite of \theta_i?
\displaystyle \frac{n_1}{n_2} = \frac{\sin \theta_r}{\sin \theta_i}
n_1 is the refractive index of a dielectric. If | \epsilon '' + \sigma / \omega | \gg \epsilon ' (this happens in a good conductor), we will have n_2 \gg n_1 and
\sin \theta_r \simeq 0
while I expected \sin \theta_r \simeq 1. What's wrong?
Thank you anyway!
Emily