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ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY EEE261 (Fall 2012)

ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY EEE261 (Fall 2012). 04 Sep 2012. Introductory Presentation Muhammad Bilal. My Coordinates. I am based in the Electrical Engineering Department. Faculty Office: Phone (Office): Email:. 2. Course Introduction. Title Electromagnetic Theory Credit Hours 3.0

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ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY EEE261 (Fall 2012)

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  1. ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORYEEE261(Fall 2012) 04Sep 2012 Introductory Presentation Muhammad Bilal

  2. My Coordinates • I am based in the Electrical Engineering Department. • Faculty Office: • Phone (Office): • Email: 2

  3. Course Introduction • Title • Electromagnetic Theory • Credit Hours • 3.0 • Pre-requisites • Engineering physics • Calculus 3

  4. Course Objectives • To provide you with thorough and conceptual understanding of the rich/variant phenomena of electricity and magnetism before moving on to advance subjects of interest. e.g. • antennas & arrays,microwave engineering,radar systems • fiber and integrated optics,quantum electronics • high speed networks,remote sensing of environment • wireless communications 4

  5. Course Structure Transmission lines/Waveguides/Microwave devices/Antennas Maxwell Equations Main Objective Complex Time Varying EM Fields Magneto Statics Electro Statics Vector Analysis Introduction 5

  6. Course Contents • VECTOR ANALYSIS • Vector Algebra • Coordinate Systems and Transformations • Vector Calculus • ELECTROSTATICS • Electric Charge and Coulomb’s Law • Gauss’s Law and Divergence Theorem • Electric Potential • Electric Fields in Materials Space • Electrostatic boundary value problems Introduction 6

  7. Course Contents • MAGNETOSTATICS • Steady Magnetic Field • Magnetic Forces , Materials and Inductance • TIME VARYING FIELDS • Time varying fields and Maxwell’s Equations • Introduction to wave propagation theory(optional) Introduction 7

  8. TimeLine Introduction 8

  9. Difficult, demanding but an important course !!! • Forms basis for other core electronics courses • Opens new avenues for your fyp’s • Important for your professional careers 9

  10. Books • Text • Engineering Electromagnetics by William H.Hayt,Jr and John A.Buck,7th Edition [ISBN:007-12449-2,Publisher:McGraw Hill International Edition 2006} • References • Elements of Electromagnetics by Matthew N.O.Sadiku,3rd Edition[ Publisher: Oxford University Press Edition 2001] • Introduction to Electromagnetic Fieldsby Clayton R.Paul, Keith W.Whites, Syed A.Nasar ,3rd Edition[Publisher:McGraw Hill Series] Introduction 10

  11. Learning Aids • Examples • Drill Problems • End of Chapter Problems • Online Computer Demos • Students Media Suite • (supplement of the text • book) Introduction 11

  12. Learning Aids… • Student Media Suite • Illustrations • Courtesy: Engineering Electromagnetics by William H.Hayt,Jr • and John A.Buck,7th Edition [ISBN:007-12449-2, • Publisher: McGraw Hill International Edition 2006} • Student media suite Introduction 12

  13. Learning Aids • Student Media Suite • Flash Animations • Courtesy: Engineering Electromagnetics by William • H.Hayt,Jr and John A.Buck,7th Edition [ISBN:007-12449-2, • Publisher:McGraw Hill International Edition 2006} • Student media suite Introduction 13

  14. Learning Aids • Student Media Suite • Interactives • Courtesy:Engineering Electromagnetics by William H.Hayt,Jr • and John A.Buck,7th Edition [ISBN:007-12449-2, • Publisher:McGraw Hill International Edition 2006} • Student media suite Introduction 14

  15. Lab Structure Could be…..??? • MATLAB based labs to be conducted on Electromagnetic Fundamentals Concepts • Vector algebra • Coordinates system and transformations • Electric field Simulation • Electric potential Simulation • Magnetic field Simulation • Divergence, Curl, Gradient Simulations • Bio-Savart Law and Ampere’s Law Simulations Introduction 15

  16. Grading Matters • Probable Grading Criterion • Quizzes (best of 5 to be selected): 10% • Home Assignments: 5% • Lab Assignments: 10% • Semester Project 5% • One Hour Tests (6th and 13th week): 30% • Final Exams (20th week): 40% Introduction 16

  17. Some practical issues… • Attendance • Student with less then 75% will NOT be allowed to sit in the OHTs and Final exam • Attendence will be taken within 2-3 mins of commencement of class and doors would be closed. • Punctuality to be maintained for lectures/lab sessions. • Mobile phones to be switched off. • No late submission of assignments or /copying cheating of any type shall be allowed in any case. • Assignment submission to be done before commencement of next class. • No activity of ill discipline (talking , disturbing the class) to be tolerated. Introduction 17

  18. Some practical issues…contd! • In case of absence, you are responsible of getting to know about assigns/lecture notes/announcements missed. • Convey your collective class problems through your CR • To deal with any sort of individual course related problems, contact me: • In class • Through email Introduction 18

  19. Electrical & Communication Engineering Model Information System Energy Model 2: TX Line Theory Model 3: Field Theory DSP, COMM CONTROL Systems Model 1: Circuit Theory EM Advance Courses EMT NETWORKS Introduction 19

  20. Electromagnetics • The study of effect(electric and magnetic fields) of charges at rest and charges in motion. • The Electromagnetic force is one of the four known fundamental forces of nature • All theory of electrical engineering is based on electromagnetics Introduction 20

  21. Something to think about! Fundamental Limits Information System Energy Shannon’s Theorem Nyquist Stability Criterion Maxwell’s Equations Fundamental laws of classical electromagnetics Introduction 21

  22. Why study electromagnetics? • Wireless communications systems require antennas • To better understand modern communications and computer systems. • To be able to design and analyze electromagnetics- based devices Introduction 22

  23. Why Electromagnetics is difficult? • Because Electric and Magnetic Fields • are three-dimensional • are vectors • vary in space as well as time • are governed by PDEs • As a result • Solution of electromagnetics problems requires a high level of abstract thinking – which is an ability to think three dimensionally in space.It is not possible to solve them by finding the right formula in which to plug the numbers. • Students must develop a deep physical understanding of wave propagation mechanisms where math becomes a powerful tool rather than a crutch Introduction 23

  24. Jobs in Electromagnetics Wireless Communication (Motorola, Mobilink, Ufone, Siemens,Nokia, Samsung, etc.) Integrated Circuits and Complex Computing/Communication Systems (Intel, IBM, AMD, etc.) High Performance Communication and Radar Systems (Northrop Grumman, BAE, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Rockwell Collins, Raytheon, etc.) National Laboratories (SUPARCO, Air Weapons Complex, NASCOM, National Defence Complex, etc.) Computational Electromagnetics R&D Introduction 24

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