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Plane wave
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==Special types== ===Traveling plane wave=== [[File:Plane wave wavefronts 3D.svg|thumb|right|300px|The [[wavefront]]s of a plane wave traveling in [[3-space]]]] Often the term "plane wave" refers specifically to a ''[[traveling plane wave]]'', whose evolution in time can be described as simple translation of the field at a constant ''[[Phase velocity|wave speed]]'' <math>c</math> along the direction perpendicular to the wavefronts. Such a field can be written as <math display="block">F(\vec x, t) = G\left(\vec x \cdot \vec n - c t\right)\,</math> where <math>G(u)</math> is now a function of a single real parameter <math>u = d - c t</math>, that describes the "profile" of the wave, namely the value of the field at time <math>t = 0</math>, for each displacement <math>d = \vec x \cdot \vec n</math>. In that case, <math>\vec n</math> is called the ''[[direction of propagation]]''. For each displacement <math>d</math>, the moving plane perpendicular to <math>\vec n</math> at distance <math>d + c t</math> from the origin is called a "[[wavefront]]". This plane travels along the direction of propagation <math>\vec n</math> with velocity <math>c</math>; and the value of the field is then the same, and constant in time, at every one of its points.<ref>{{cite book |last=Jackson |first= John David |author-link= John David Jackson (physicist) |date= 1998 |title=[[Classical Electrodynamics (book)|Classical Electrodynamics]] |location=New York |publisher=[[Wiley (publisher)|Wiley]] |isbn= 9780471309321 |edition=3 |page = 296}}</ref> ===Sinusoidal plane wave=== {{Main|Sinusoidal plane wave}} The term is also used, even more specifically, to mean a "monochromatic" or [[sinusoidal plane wave]]: a travelling plane wave whose profile <math>G(u)</math> is a [[sinusoidal]] function. That is, <math display="block">F(\vec x, t) = A \sin\left(2\pi f (\vec x \cdot \vec n - c t) + \varphi\right)</math> The parameter <math>A</math>, which may be a scalar or a vector, is called the [[amplitude]] of the wave; the scalar coefficient <math>f</math> is its "spatial frequency"; and the scalar <math>\varphi</math> is its "[[phase shift]]". A true plane wave cannot physically exist, because it would have to fill all space. Nevertheless, the plane wave model is important and widely used in physics. The waves emitted by any source with finite extent into a large homogeneous region of space can be well approximated by plane waves when viewed over any part of that region that is sufficiently small compared to its distance from the source. That is the case, for example, of the [[light wave]]s from a distant star that arrive at a telescope. ===Plane standing wave === A [[standing wave]] is a field whose value can be expressed as the product of two functions, one depending only on position, the other only on time. A [[plane standing wave]], in particular, can be expressed as <math display="block">F(\vec x, t) = G(\vec x \cdot \vec n) \, S(t)</math> where <math>G</math> is a function of one scalar parameter (the displacement <math>d = \vec x \cdot \vec n</math>) with scalar or vector values, and <math>S</math> is a scalar function of time. This representation is not unique, since the same field values are obtained if <math>S</math> and <math>G</math> are scaled by reciprocal factors. If <math>\left|S(t)\right|</math> is bounded in the time interval of interest (which is usually the case in physical contexts), <math>S</math> and <math>G</math> can be scaled so that the maximum value of <math>\left|S(t)\right|</math> is 1. Then <math>\left|G(\vec x \cdot \vec n)\right|</math> will be the maximum field magnitude seen at the point <math>\vec x</math>.
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