Circuit Craziness
The Complex Side
Maxwell's Masterpieces
Riding the Wave
Law and Order
100

These are the three classic passive components that store or dissipate energy in a system.

What are resistors, inductors, and capacitors?

100

This mathematical tool allows circuit differential equations to be solved as simpler algebraic problems.

What are complex numbers

100

This local expression, ∇⋅j+∂tρ=0, represents the fundamental conservation of charge.

What is the continuity equation

100

Calculated as 1/μ0ϵ0, this is the universal speed at which electromagnetic signals propagate in a vacuum

What is the speed of light (c)?

100

This fundamental law of electrostatics states that the force between two point charges is proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance separating them

What is Coulomb’s Law?

200

In the mechanical analogy of an LC circuit, this component acts like a spring, storing energy even when no charge is in motion.

What is a capacitor?

200

Measured in Ohms, this is the complex generalized version of resistance in an AC circuit

What is impedance (Z)?

200

This term, ϵ0∂tE, acts as a continuation of current density even in the absence of physical charge carriers.

What is the displacement current?

200

Defined as S=1/μ0(E×B), this vector field represents the flow of energy per unit time per unit area.

What is the Poynting vector?

200

This essential law relates the net electric flux passing through a closed surface to the total quantity of charge enclosed within that surface

What is Gauss’s Law?

300


This component provides a circuit with "inertia," resisting changes in current and associating energy with charges in motion.

What is an inductor?

300

This is the specific phase shift, in degrees, that a purely inductive circuit has between its voltage and current.

What is 90 degrees (or π/2)?


300


This specific law of induction states that a changing magnetic field is associated with a curling electric field.

What is Faraday's Law?

300

In a traveling EM wave in a vacuum, this is the constant ratio between the magnitude of the Electric field and the Magnetic field (E/B).

What is the speed of light (c)?


300

Often summarized by a minus sign in Faraday’s Law, this principle dictates that an induced current will flow in a direction that creates a magnetic field opposing any change in magnetic flux

Answer: What is Lenz’s Law?

400

In an AC circuit, this frequency-dependent state occurs when the inductive and capacitive effects cancel out, resulting in the maximum peak current.

What is resonance?

400

This theorem states that maximum power is delivered to a load when the load impedance is the complex conjugate of the source impedance.

What is the Maximum Power Transfer Theorem?

400

Without free charges or currents, Maxwell's equations show that E and B fields are related by this mathematical property.

What is symmetry (or duality)?

400

This wave phenomenon occurs when the electric field of an EM wave is confined to a specific orientation, such as the x-axis.

What is polarization?

400

This Maxwell Equation states that a time-varying magnetic field creates a circulating electric field, providing the mathematical basis for calculating induced electromotive force (EMF)

What is Faraday’s Law of Induction?

500

This dimensionless ratio compares the energy stored in an oscillator to the average power dissipated per cycle.

What is the Quality factor (or Q)?

500

In the complex impedance formula Z=R+iX, this is the specific name for the imaginary part X.


What is reactance?

500

He is the physicist who "fixed" Ampere's Law by adding a term for changing electric fields.

Who is James Clerk Maxwell?


500

This is the specific term for the time-averaged energy flux of a fixed-frequency EM wave.

What is irradiance (or intensity)?

500

These dual differential equations describe the behavior of current and voltage pulses traveling down a line by relating their spatial derivatives to their time derivatives via the line’s inductance and capacitance per unit length

(Not a law but close enough)

What are the Telegrapher’s Equations?