Electromagnetic Spectrum 🌈

All electromagnetic waves zip through empty space at the same speed: \(c = 3 \times 10^{8}\,\text{m/s}\). From the longest wavelengths (radio) to the shortest (gamma), each band is set apart mostly by how we make and detect the waves rather than by any sharp boundary. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Snapshot of the Spectrum

  • Order (long λ → short λ): Radio → Microwaves → Infrared → Visible → Ultraviolet → X-rays → Gamma-rays.
  • Frequency range of visible light: \(4 \times 10^{14}\,\text{Hz} – 7 \times 10^{14}\,\text{Hz}\) (≈ 700 nm – 400 nm).
  • There are no sharp “walls” between bands—neighbors overlap a bit.

Bands in Detail

📻 Radio Waves

  • Made by accelerating charges in metal antennas.
  • Typical frequencies: 500 kHz – 1 GHz.
  • Handy numbers: AM 530 kHz – 1710 kHz, Short-wave up to 54 MHz, TV 54 MHz – 890 MHz, FM 88 MHz – 108 MHz, cell phones in the UHF slice.
  • Main uses: broadcasting, TV, mobile communication.

📡 Microwaves

  • Generated by special tubes (klystrons, magnetrons, Gunn diodes).
  • Frequency in the gigahertz (GHz) range.
  • Key uses: aircraft radar, speed guns, satellite links, and the microwave oven—its frequency matches water-molecule resonance for super-efficient heating 🍲!

🔥 Infrared (IR)

  • Given off by hot objects and vibrating molecules.
  • Often called heat waves because water, CO2, NH3 soak them up and warm up.
  • Applications: physiotherapy lamps, remote controls, crop-growth imaging, greenhouse effect (keeps Earth cozy 🌍).

👁️ Visible Light

  • The slice our eyes see: ≈ 700 nm – 400 nm.
  • Different creatures “see” different bands—snakes sense IR; many insects extend into UV.

☀️ Ultraviolet (UV)

  • Wavelengths: 400 nm → 0.6 nm.
  • Main natural source: the Sun, but most UV is stopped by the ozone layer ~40–50 km up (hooray 🛡️).
  • Uses: sterilizing water, LASIK eye surgery, detecting forged notes—but too much UV causes sunburn and eye damage, so welders wear dark goggles.

🩻 X-rays

  • Made when high-energy electrons smash into a metal target.
  • Wavelengths: 10 nm → 0.01 nm.
  • Famous for medical imaging and treating some cancers—careful though, they can damage tissues.

💥 Gamma Rays

  • Shortest wavelengths: < 0.01 nm.
  • Born in nuclear reactions and radioactive decay.
  • Penetrating enough to zap cancer cells in radiotherapy.

Handy Examples

Example 8.1 – Finding the Magnetic Field 🧭

For a wave with frequency \(25\,\text{MHz}\) traveling along the \(x\)-axis and electric field \(\mathbf{E}=6.3\,\hat{\jmath}\,\text{V m}^{-1}\):

\[ B \;=\; \frac{E}{c}\;=\;\frac{6.3}{3\times10^{8}}\;=\;2.1\times10^{-8}\,\text{T}, \] and it points in the \(+\hat{k}\) direction since \(\mathbf{E}\times\mathbf{B}\) must aim along \(+\hat{\imath}\). :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Example 8.2 – Wavelength, Frequency & Electric Field 📝

Given \(B_y = (2 \times 10^{-7}) \sin\!\bigl(0.5 \times 10^{3}\,x + 1.5 \times 10^{11}\,t\bigr)\),

  • \(\displaystyle \lambda = \frac{2\pi}{0.5\times10^{3}} = 1.26\,\text{cm}\).
  • \(\displaystyle \nu = \frac{1.5\times10^{11}}{2\pi} \approx 23.9\,\text{GHz}\).
  • The accompanying electric field (perpendicular to \(B\)) is \(E_z = 60 \sin(0.5\times10^{3}x + 1.5\times10^{11}t)\,\text{V m}^{-1}\).

Great practice for spotting \(k\), \(\omega\), and trusting \(E_0 = c B_0\)! 💡 :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}

Production & Detection at a Glance

TypeTypical λ RangeHow It’s ProducedHow We Spot It
Radio>0.1 mRapid charge accelerations in antennasReceiver aerials
Microwave0.1 m → 1 mmKlystron / magnetron tubesPoint-contact diodes
Infrared1 mm → 700 nmVibrating atoms & moleculesThermopile, bolometer, IR film
Visible700 nm → 400 nmElectron jumps in atomsEyes, photocells, film
Ultraviolet400 nm → 1 nmInner-shell electron jumpsPhotocells, film
X-ray1 nm → 0.001 nmX-ray tubes, inner-shell transitionsFilm, Geiger tubes
Gamma<0.001 nmRadioactive nuclear decayIonization chambers, film

(Boundaries blur a little in real life.) :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

High-Yield NEET Nuggets 🏆

  1. Order & Ranges: Remember the spectrum sequence and the ball-park frequencies/wavelengths for quick MCQs.
  2. Speed Relation: For any electromagnetic wave, \( \dfrac{E}{B} = c \). Spot this in calculation-based questions.
  3. Microwave Resonance: Oven frequencies match water-molecule resonance—classic application favorite.
  4. Atmospheric Filters: Ozone stops most UV; greenhouse gases trap IR—popular conceptual hooks linking physics & environment.
  5. Medical Imaging: X-rays for diagnostics, gamma rays for cancer therapy—often paired in application-type problems.