Electromagnetic Waves

Radio Waves and Microwaves

Master Radio Waves and Microwaves with production, detection, communication systems, radar, microwave oven, frequency ranges, wavelength ranges, numericals, MCQs, PYQs and case studies.

CBSE NEET JEE Main JEE Advanced IB IGCSE A-Level

1. Introduction to Radio Waves

Radio waves are electromagnetic waves having the longest wavelength region in the electromagnetic spectrum. They are mainly used for radio broadcasting, television transmission, mobile communication, wireless communication, navigation and space communication.

Frequency Range: approximately 3 kHz to 300 GHz, depending on classification.
Wavelength Range: from kilometres to millimetres.
Production: accelerated or oscillating charges in antenna systems.
Detection: receiving antenna, tuning circuit and demodulator.
c = fλ

Since radio waves are EM waves, they travel in vacuum with speed 3 × 108 m/s. Their low frequency makes them suitable for long-distance communication.

2. Production of Radio Waves

Radio waves are produced when electric charges are accelerated periodically. In a transmitting antenna, electrons oscillate back and forth due to alternating current. This oscillation produces changing electric and magnetic fields, which travel outward as electromagnetic waves.

LC Oscillator

An LC oscillator produces high-frequency electrical oscillations. The energy continuously changes between electric field energy in the capacitor and magnetic field energy in the inductor.

f = 1 / (2π√LC)

Here, L is inductance, C is capacitance and f is frequency of oscillation. If this oscillating signal is supplied to an antenna, radio waves are radiated.

LC Oscillator Antenna Radiated Radio Waves

3. Detection of Radio Waves

Radio waves are detected by a receiving antenna. When the incoming radio wave reaches the antenna, it produces alternating current in it. The receiver uses a tuning circuit to select the required frequency.

Receiving Antenna: converts EM waves into electrical signals.
Tuning Circuit: selects one desired frequency using resonance.
Demodulator: separates audio/information signal from carrier wave.
Amplifier: increases signal strength for output.

Resonance in Tuning

A radio receiver selects a station when its LC circuit resonates with the carrier frequency of that station.

f0 = 1 / (2π√LC)

4. Communication System

A basic communication system consists of a transmitter, channel and receiver. In radio communication, information is first converted into an electrical signal, then modulated with a high-frequency carrier wave and transmitted through an antenna.

Message Modulator Antenna Receiver Output

AM and FM

In amplitude modulation, the amplitude of carrier wave varies according to the signal. In frequency modulation, the frequency of carrier wave varies according to the signal. FM gives better sound quality and less noise than AM.

5. Microwaves

Microwaves are electromagnetic waves having frequency roughly from 300 MHz to 300 GHz. Their wavelength lies between 1 metre and 1 millimetre approximately. They are used in radar, satellite communication, GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and microwave ovens.

PropertyMicrowaves
Frequency RangeAbout 300 MHz to 300 GHz
Wavelength RangeAbout 1 m to 1 mm
ProductionKlystron, magnetron, Gunn diode
DetectionSpecial microwave receivers, antennas, semiconductor detectors
ApplicationsRadar, satellite communication, Wi-Fi, microwave oven

Generation of Microwaves

Microwaves can be produced using devices such as magnetron, klystron and Gunn diode. A magnetron is commonly used in microwave ovens to generate microwaves of frequency about 2.45 GHz.

6. Radar

RADAR stands for Radio Detection and Ranging. It uses microwaves to detect objects and measure their distance, speed and direction. A radar system sends a short pulse of microwaves. The pulse reflects from the object and returns as an echo.

R = ct / 2

Here, R is distance of target, c is speed of EM wave and t is total time taken by the pulse to go to the target and return.

RADAR Aircraft Microwave Pulse Reflected Echo

Applications of Radar

Radar is used in aircraft navigation, missile tracking, weather forecasting, traffic speed monitoring, marine navigation and defence systems.

7. Microwave Oven

A microwave oven works on the principle of dielectric heating. It uses microwaves of frequency about 2.45 GHz. These waves cause water molecules in food to rotate rapidly. This molecular rotation produces heat and cooks the food.

Source: Magnetron
Frequency: 2.45 GHz
Heating: rotation of polar water molecules
Process: dielectric heating
Food Microwave Oven Heating

Safety: Metallic objects should not be placed inside a microwave oven because they can produce sparks due to induced currents.

8. Radio Waves vs Microwaves

PropertyRadio WavesMicrowaves
FrequencyLowerHigher than radio waves
WavelengthLongerShorter
ProductionOscillating antennasMagnetron, klystron, Gunn diode
DetectionReceiving antennaMicrowave detector and antenna
ApplicationsBroadcasting, radio, TVRadar, Wi-Fi, GPS, microwave oven
PenetrationGood for long distanceGood for directional communication

9. Memory Tricks

Radio = Range: Radio waves are useful for long range broadcasting.
Micro = Modern: Microwaves are used in modern systems like Wi-Fi, GPS and radar.
RADAR: Radio Detection And Ranging.
Oven: 2.45 GHz rotates water molecules and heats food.

10. Important Conceptual Questions

Q1. Why are radio waves used for long-distance communication?
Radio waves have long wavelengths and can diffract around obstacles. They can also reflect from ionosphere in some frequency ranges, making long-distance communication possible.
Q2. Why are microwaves used in radar?
Microwaves have short wavelength, so they can form narrow beams and give accurate direction and distance measurement.
Q3. Why does a microwave oven heat food?
Microwaves cause polar water molecules in food to rotate rapidly. This molecular motion increases internal energy and produces heat.
Q4. Why is modulation necessary?
Modulation allows a low-frequency message signal to be transmitted efficiently over long distances by combining it with a high-frequency carrier wave.
Q5. Why is an antenna needed?
An antenna converts electrical oscillations into electromagnetic waves during transmission and converts EM waves into electrical signals during reception.
Q6. Why are microwaves used for satellite communication?
Microwaves pass through the atmosphere with relatively low loss and can be directed as narrow beams toward satellites.
Q7. What is carrier wave?
A carrier wave is a high-frequency wave used to carry information signals over long distances.
Q8. What is demodulation?
Demodulation is the process of extracting the original information signal from a modulated carrier wave.

11. MCQs with Answers

1. Radio waves are produced by: (A) static charges (B) accelerated charges (C) neutrons (D) stationary magnets
Answer: B. Accelerated charges produce electromagnetic waves.
2. Microwave oven commonly uses frequency nearly: (A) 50 Hz (B) 2.45 GHz (C) 100 MHz (D) 10 kHz
Answer: B. Microwave ovens commonly operate near 2.45 GHz.
3. Radar uses mainly: (A) infrared (B) microwaves (C) gamma rays (D) ultraviolet
Answer: B. Radar uses microwaves.
4. The formula for radar distance is:
Answer: R = ct/2, because the pulse travels to the target and returns.
5. LC circuit frequency is:
Answer: f = 1/(2π√LC)
6. Which device produces microwaves in an oven?
Answer: Magnetron.
7. AM stands for:
Answer: Amplitude Modulation.
8. FM stands for:
Answer: Frequency Modulation.

12. PYQ-Style Practice

NEET Level

NEET Q1. Which EM waves are used in satellite communication?
Answer: Microwaves. They can pass through atmosphere and can be directed in narrow beams.
NEET Q2. Which wave is used in microwave oven?
Answer: Microwaves of frequency about 2.45 GHz.

JEE Main Level

JEE Q1. A radar pulse returns after 4 μs. Find target distance.
Solution: R = ct/2 = (3×10⁸ × 4×10⁻⁶)/2 = 600 m.
JEE Q2. Find frequency of LC circuit with L = 1 mH and C = 1 nF.
Solution: f = 1/(2π√LC) = 1/(2π√(10⁻³×10⁻⁹)) ≈ 5.03 MHz.

JEE Advanced Level

Advanced Q1. Why do microwaves provide better angular resolution in radar than radio waves?
Answer: Short wavelength produces narrower beam width for a given antenna aperture, improving angular resolution.

IGCSE / A-Level

A-Level Q1. Explain why food containing water heats effectively in a microwave oven.
Answer: Water molecules are polar. Alternating microwave electric field causes them to rotate, causing molecular friction and heating.

13. Advanced Numericals

Numerical 1. A radar signal returns after 10 μs. Find the distance of target.
Given: t = 10 μs = 10×10⁻⁶ s
Formula: R = ct/2
Solution: R = (3×10⁸ × 10×10⁻⁶)/2 = 1500 m
Answer: 1.5 km
Numerical 2. A microwave has frequency 2.45 GHz. Find wavelength.
Formula: λ = c/f
λ = 3×10⁸ / 2.45×10⁹ = 0.122 m
Answer: 12.2 cm approximately.
Numerical 3. Find wavelength of radio wave of frequency 100 MHz.
λ = c/f = 3×10⁸ / 100×10⁶ = 3 m.
Answer: 3 m.
Numerical 4. LC oscillator has L = 10 μH and C = 100 pF. Find frequency.
f = 1/(2π√LC)
L = 10×10⁻⁶ H, C = 100×10⁻¹² F
f ≈ 5.03 MHz.
Answer: 5.03 MHz.

14. Case Studies

Case Study 1: Airport Radar

An airport radar sends microwave pulses toward aircraft. A pulse returns after 20 μs.

Q1: Which waves are used?
Answer: Microwaves.

Q2: Find aircraft distance.
Solution: R = ct/2 = 3×10⁸×20×10⁻⁶/2 = 3000 m.

Q3: Why microwaves?
Answer: They form narrow beams and give accurate detection.

Case Study 2: Microwave Oven

A microwave oven uses frequency 2.45 GHz. Food containing water heats quickly.

Q1: Source device?
Answer: Magnetron.

Q2: Heating principle?
Answer: Dielectric heating due to rotation of polar water molecules.

Q3: Find wavelength.
Answer: λ ≈ 12.2 cm.

Case Study 3: Satellite Communication

Satellite communication commonly uses microwaves because they can pass through atmosphere and can be focused into narrow beams.

Q1: Why not very low frequency radio waves?
Answer: They cannot be focused easily into narrow beams.

Q2: Main advantage of microwaves?
Answer: Directional transmission and high bandwidth.

15. Quick Revision Sheet

c = fλ
f = 1/(2π√LC)
R = ct/2
Microwave Oven: 2.45 GHz
RADAR = Radio Detection and Ranging
Radio waves: broadcasting

16. Common Mistakes

  • Confusing radio waves and microwaves.
  • Forgetting that radar pulse travels twice the distance.
  • Using R = ct instead of R = ct/2.
  • Thinking microwave oven heats food from outside only.
  • Forgetting the LC oscillator formula.
  • Confusing modulation and demodulation.
  • Assuming microwaves are used only for ovens.

Need Help in Electromagnetic Waves?

If Radio Waves, Microwaves, Radar, Communication Systems or Electromagnetic Spectrum concepts are not clear, contact Kumar Sir for one-to-one Physics guidance.

Contact: +91-9958461445

Email: kumarsirphysics@gmail.com

Website: https://kumarphysicsclasses.com

Kumar Physics Classes
30+ Years Teaching Experience
FIITJEE • Aakash • CBSE • NEET • IIT-JEE • AP • IB • IGCSE • A-Level

```
Scroll to Top