On the Wave Speed of Thermal Radiation Inside and Near the Boundary of an Absorbing Material

2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bair V. Budaev ◽  
David B. Bogy

Abstract Planck's law describes thermal radiation into vacuum from a black body in thermal equilibrium. This law can be easily adapted to describe radiation into a transparent medium with a constant refractive index, and it admits a less trivial extension to radiation into a transparent medium with a nonconstant refractive index. However, this law cannot be straightforwardly generalized to describe thermal radiation into absorbing media and, in particular, to describe thermally exited electromagnetic fields inside the radiating body itself. We first analyze Planck's law and show why it cannot be straightforwardly extended to radiation into an absorbing medium. The derivation of this law relies on the assumption that a radiated field admits decomposition into normal modes, which cannot exist in absorbing media that are characterized by a complex-valued refractive index n=n′+in″, whose imaginary part describes the rate of energy dissipation. Correspondingly, the speed of electromagnetic waves in absorbing media c=c0/n, where c0 is the speed of light in vacuum, is also complex-valued, which suggests that the conventional concept of a complex valued wave speed is not suitable for modeling thermal radiation. We demonstrate that complex-valued wave speeds adequately describe waves that carry signals, such as radio waves and laser beams. Such waves decay because they pass some of their energy to the medium. The energy absorbed by the medium is eventually reradiated, but in studies focused on the transmission of signals, the reradiated fields are ignored as noise. In order to study thermal radiation in an absorbing material, one must treat the material and the radiation together as a closed system. The energy in such a system is conserved, and its distribution between the material and radiation does not change in time. This radiation admits decomposition into normal modes, which makes it possible to extend Planck's law to radiation into absorbing materials. This paper proposes a model of thermal radiation in an absorbing medium as a closed, energy conserving system. The radiation field has normal modes that correspond to an effective speed of wave propagation. Assuming that an absorbing material and the radiation in it are in thermal equilibrium, we show that deep inside the material, the average speed of photons is given by a frequency and temperature-dependent expression c∗=c0/(1+e−ℏω/κT). While this result is independent of the material, we further show that close to the boundary of the medium, the speed of thermal radiation depends in a complex way on the refractive index and the extinction coefficient of the material, as well as the direction of propagation and the distance from the material's surface.

2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 1585-1596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamalabadia Abdollahzadeh ◽  
Hyun Park ◽  
Chang Lee

This study presents the effect of thermal radiation on the steady flow in a vertical micro channel filled with highly absorbing medium. The governing equations (mass, momentum and energy equation with Rosseland approximation and slip boundary condition) are solved analytically. The effects of thermal radiation parameter, the temperature parameter, Reynolds number, Grashof number, velocity slip length, and temperature jump on the velocity and temperature profiles, Nusselt number, and skin friction coefficient are investigated. Results show that the skin friction and the Nusselt number are increased with increase in Grashof number, velocity slip, and pressure gradient while temperature jump and Reynolds number have an adverse effect on them. Furthermore, a criterion for the flow unsteadiness based on the temperature parameter, thermal radiation parameter, and the temperature jump is presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gyeong Cheol Park ◽  
Kwangwook Park

Abstract We propose an all-dielectric quasi-one-port resonance structure that achieves near perfect absorption without the use of a back mirror. The structure mainly consists of a high-refractive-index silicon metasurface and surrounding high-refractive-index guiding layers. The dual-guiding-layer (DGL) structure has high background reflectance and is designed to have a ratio of two decay rates into the upper and lower regions within a wider range. When an absorbing material is introduced into a DGL system, it can be designed to achieve a near critical-coupling condition by reducing the constraints in the two decay rates. By using single-layer graphene as an absorbing material, the DGL resonance structure shows an absorption of ~ 97% and a phase change of ∼ 0.95π near the wavelength of 1550 nm, confirming quasi-critical coupling. The optimized DGL structure is relatively insensitive to potential fabrication imperfections, and consequently, the expected average peak wavelength and absorption are obtained as 1549.29 nm and 96.74%, respectively. Angle-dependent absorption confirms that maximum absorption occurs under normal incidence. The DGL absorber is also designed to cover the whole C-band region, in order to meet the quasi-critical-coupling condition. All mode profiles are similarly quasi-symmetric along the metasurface due to the same DGL resonance mechanism.


1972 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Caren ◽  
C. K. Liu

The emission of thermal radiation from a microscopically roughened dielectric surface is treated using a laminar-inhomogeneous layered model for a representation of the effective spatial variation in refractive index associated with a roughened surface layer. The Riccati equation is used to calculate the modification to the spectral angular transmittance of the surface due to the presence of this inhomogeneous surface layer. A consideration of the emission of radiant energy from the bulk dielectric through the surface layer permits the angular emittance to be determined. Total emittance values are obtained using the spectral angular emittance data.


1966 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Wong ◽  
D. Bershader

The physical mechanisms underlying the relaxation process leading to thermal equilibrium behind ionizing shock waves in argon have been studied through use of optical techniques. The non-equilibrium condition in the relaxation region was investigated experimentally by measuring the shift in the fringes due to a change in the refractive index of the medium with a Mach–Zehnder interferometer. Both electron- and mass-density profiles from the shock front to the equilibrium region were determined. The experimental work has been supplemented by a theoretical analysis of the ionization mechanism to explain the measured profiles and relaxation times.


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 7578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yago Arosa ◽  
Elena López Lago ◽  
Raúl de la Fuente

1972 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurt Suchy†

With the generalized group velocity vg = Re (∂ω/∂k) for media with moderate absorption, derived in a previous paper, the Hamilton equations for group propagation in non-absorbing media are generalized to include moderate absorption. They contain directional derivatives not only in the direction of v but also in the direction of Im (∂ω/∂k). Two iterative computational methods are presented for ray tracing with the generalized Hamilton equations.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1583
Author(s):  
Sara Cruz y Cruz ◽  
Alejandro Romero-Osnaya ◽  
Oscar Rosas-Ortiz

The construction of exactly solvable refractive indices allowing guided TE modes in optical waveguides is investigated within the formalism of Darboux–Crum transformations. We apply the finite-difference algorithm for higher-order supersymmetric quantum mechanics to obtain complex-valued refractive indices admitting all-real eigenvalues in their point spectrum. The new refractive indices are such that their imaginary part gives zero if it is integrated over the entire domain of definition. This property, called condition of zero total area, ensures the conservation of optical power so the refractive index shows balanced gain and loss. Consequently, the complex-valued refractive indices reported in this work include but are not limited to the parity-time invariant case.


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