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METHODOLOGICAL NOTES
On the existence conditions for a fast surface wave
A. V. Kukushkina,
A. A. Rukhadzeb,
K. Z. Rukhadzeb a Nizhny Novgorod State Technical University
b A. M. Prokhorov General Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences
Abstract:
Conditions are obtained for the existence of a fast-moving surface electromagnetic wave (with a speed close to the speed of light in the vacuum) on a flat interface between the vacuum and an isotropic dissipative medium with a permittivity $\varepsilon = \varepsilon' + \mathrm i\varepsilon''$. The interfaces considered include vacuum–seawater, vacuum–metal, vacuum–plasma, and vacuum–dielectric. Conditions for the existence of negligibly damped surface waves are considered for extremely high (vacuum–seawater, vacuum–metal) and very low (vacuum–plasma, vacuum–dielectric)
$\varepsilon''$ values. It is shown that at least in these two limit cases, the phase wave velocity
$V_{\mathrm p}$ and the group wave velocity
$V_{\mathrm g}$ pass synchronously through the speed of light
$c$ in the vacuum, which can be considered the reason why surface waves exist at the interface between vacuum and a collisionless plasma (with
$\varepsilon' <-1$ and
$V_{\mathrm {p,g}} < c$) and do not exist at the interface between the vacuum and a weakly absorbing dielectric (with
$\varepsilon' >1$ and
$V_{\mathrm {p, g}} >c$). In the first limit case, it is shown that both the phase and group velocities pass
$c$ at
$\varepsilon' =-3/4$, implying that a surface wave exists at the vacuum–metal interface (with
$\varepsilon <-3/4$), but that a surface wave (Zenneck's wave) cannot exist at the vacuum–seawater interface (with
$\varepsilon' > -3/4$).
PACS:
41.20.Jb,
78.68.+m Received: March 27, 2011Revised: July 14, 2011Accepted:
October 12, 2011
DOI:
10.3367/UFNr.0182.201211f.1205