Physics, asked by daniellachirom, 11 months ago

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Electromagnetic wave are not deflected by electric field and magnetic field. Why??? ​

Answers

Answered by SUMITROCK801
1

Explanation:

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Answered by BrainlyRonaldo
2

Answer:

The electric field and magnetic field of an electromagnetic wave are perpendicular (at right angles) to each other.

The solutions to Maxwell's equations in vacuum are linear and so can be added to each other without affecting each other.

There are lots of non-linear materials (e.g. lots of magnetic materials) where this isn't true, and light can be bent or its polarization rotated or its phase changed, or it can be attenuated using static (slowly varying) electric or magnetic fields).

Non-linear materials are used in lots of devices to exploit this.

In general relativity the energy density of EM waves curves space in the same way that mass does, so EM waves do affect each other even in space, but only minutely, because the equivalent mass density is usually very small.

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