3.2.4
Electromagnetic Waves 2
Fizeau and Maxwell
Fizeau and Maxwell
Fizeau and Maxwell helped to discover the speed of light.


Fizeau’s experiment
Fizeau’s experiment
- Fizeau set up an experiment using a rotating cog and a beam of light to measure the speed of light.
- He shone a beam of light through the gap between two teeth of the cog.
- This beam reflected back from a mirror, and back through a gap in the cog.
- He adjusted the speed of the cog until the reflected light was blocked completely by a tooth.
- He could then use the rotational frequency and the distance that the light had travelled to calculate the speed of light.


Maxwell's theory
Maxwell's theory
- Maxwell predicted that electromagnetic waves existed, and also predicted their speed.
- He believed that the speed of electromagnetic waves in a vacuum was:
- c =
- c = 3 × 108 ms-1


Fizeau and Maxwell
Fizeau and Maxwell
- Fizeau’s observed speed of light was very close to Maxwell’s estimation.
- This was evidence that light was an electromagnetic wave.
Hertz's Discovery of Radio Waves
Hertz's Discovery of Radio Waves
Hertz not only discovered radio waves, but also measured how fast they travel.


Hertz's discovery
Hertz's discovery
- In 1887, Hertz discovered the radio wave.
- Using an induction coil, he showed that sparks could cross a gap of air.
- He found that these waves could induce a potential difference, and so had a magnetic component.


Measuring the speed of radio waves
Measuring the speed of radio waves
- Hertz set up radio wave detectors at regular intervals, and managed to construct a stationary radio wave.
- He then measured the wavelength, and by using a fixed resonant frequency he could measure the speed using:
- v = fλ
- The speed lined up with Maxwell’s prediction, and provided evidence that radio waves were another type of electromagnetic wave.
1Space, Time & Motion
1.1Motion
1.2Forces
1.3Momentum & Impulse
2The Particulate Nature of Matter
2.1Thermal Concepts
3Wave Behaviour
3.1Oscillations
3.2Travelling Waves
3.3Wave Characteristics
3.4Wave Behaviour
3.5Standing Waves
3.6Simple Harmonic Motion
3.7Single Slit Diffraction
3.8Interference
3.9Doppler Effect
4Fields
4.1Circular Motion
4.2Newton's Law of Gravitation
4.3Fields
4.4Fields at Work
4.5Electric Fields
4.6Magnetic Effect of Electric Currents
4.7Heating Effect of Currents
4.8Electromagnetic Induction
4.9Power Generation & Transmission
5Nuclear & Quantum Physics
5.1Discrete Energy & Radioactivity
5.2Nuclear Reactions
5.3The Interaction of Matter with Radiation
6Measurements
6.1Measurements & Errors
6.2Uncertainties & Errors
6.3Vectors & Scalars
Jump to other topics
1Space, Time & Motion
1.1Motion
1.2Forces
1.3Momentum & Impulse
2The Particulate Nature of Matter
2.1Thermal Concepts
3Wave Behaviour
3.1Oscillations
3.2Travelling Waves
3.3Wave Characteristics
3.4Wave Behaviour
3.5Standing Waves
3.6Simple Harmonic Motion
3.7Single Slit Diffraction
3.8Interference
3.9Doppler Effect
4Fields
4.1Circular Motion
4.2Newton's Law of Gravitation
4.3Fields
4.4Fields at Work
4.5Electric Fields
4.6Magnetic Effect of Electric Currents
4.7Heating Effect of Currents
4.8Electromagnetic Induction
4.9Power Generation & Transmission
5Nuclear & Quantum Physics
5.1Discrete Energy & Radioactivity
5.2Nuclear Reactions
5.3The Interaction of Matter with Radiation
6Measurements
6.1Measurements & Errors
6.2Uncertainties & Errors
6.3Vectors & Scalars
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