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Consider an electromagnetic wave impinging upon an interface: Where describes the incoming wave, the reflected wave, and the transmitted wave. At the interface (ie. at points where the vector points to the plane of the interface), all the waves must be in phase with each other. This means that the frequencies must all be equal and there can beno arbitrary phase between the waves. The net result of this is that we must have (for an interface passing through the origin): from which we get
It is important to note now that we are doing this at the interface. We have chosen a coordinate system so that the interface is at and contains the origin. This implies that the vector is lying in the plane of the interface at the point where we say that the above is true.
Finally, since the incident and reflected waves are in the same medium we must have and thus Also, we get that all line in a plane (because defines a plane). We also have and following the same arguments find that all line in a plane and that Now we know that so we can multiply both sides by and get
At the interface, which we will set to for convenience (you can always switch back to any coordinate system afterwards. It is good practice to choose the coordinate system that makesyour problem easy) now this must be true for all on the surface and for all so we must have So now we have
which can be written
So now we can write
Since the interface passes through the origin, one of the allowed values of is 0. So this is only true if . (If the interface does not include the origin then you can not make thissimplification, but clearly we can always choose a coordinate system such that this is true and thereby simplify our lives) likewise we could havewritten and applied the same argument to get . Lets just use this henceforth and thus write:
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