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Group velocity
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The group velocity of a wave is the
velocity with which the overall shape
of the waves! amplitudes—known as
the modulation or envelope of the
‘wave—propagates through space
For example, if a stone is thrown into
the middle of a very still pond, a
circular pattern of waves with a
quiescent center appears in the water.
The expanding ring of waves is the
wave group, within which one can
discern individual wavelets of
differing wavelengths traveling at different speeds. The longer waves travel
faster than the group as a whole, but their amplitudes diminish as they
approach the leading edge. The shorter waves travel more slowly, and their
amplitudes diminish as they emerge from the trailing boundary of the
group.
Contents
= 1 Definition and interpretation
= 1.1 Definition
= 1.2 Derivation
© 1.2.1 Higher-order terms in dispersion
= 13 History
= 1.4 Other expressions
2 In three dimensions
3 In lossy or gainful media
MeVMrVVeevVVJfJ\rnn os
Frequency dispersion in groups of gravity waves on the surface of deep water.
‘The red dot moves with the phase velocity, and the green dots propagate with the
‘group velocity. In this deep-water case, the phase velocity is twice the group
velocity. The red dot overtakes two green dots when moving from the left to the
right of the figure,
‘New waves seem to emerge at the back of a wave group, grow in amplitude until
they are at the center of the group, and vanish at the wave group front.
For surface gravity waves, the water particle velocities are much smaller than the
phase velocity, in most cases.
= 3.1 Superluminal group velocities
4 See also
5 References
= 5.1 Notes
= 5.2 Further reading
6 External links
Definition and interpretation
Definition
The group velocity Vg is defined by the equation:
Ow
y=
[21314115]
10
This shows a wave with the group
velocity and phase velocity going in
different directions.(") The group
velocity is positive (i.e, the envelope
of the wave moves rightward), while
the phase velocity is negative (ie. the
peaks and troughs move leftward).where © is the wave's angular frequency (usually expressed in radians per
second), and k is the angular wavenumber (usually expressed in radians per
meter). The phase velocity is: vp = 0 / k.
The function co(£), which gives @ as a function of k, is known as the
dispersion relation,
= If@ is directly proportional to k, then the group velocity is exactly
equal to the phase velocity. A wave of any shape will travel
undistorted at this velocity.
= Ife isa linear function of &, but not directly proportional
(w=ak+b), then the group velocity and phase velocity are different.
The envelope of a wave packet (see figure on right) will travel at the
‘group velocity, while the individual peaks and troughs within the
envelope will move at the phase velocity.
= If co is not a linear function of k, the envelope of a wave packet will become distorted as it travels. Since a
wave packet contains a range of different frequencies (and hence different values of ), the group velocity
6co/0k will be different for different values of k, Therefore, the envelope docs not move at a single velocity,
but its wavenumber components (&) move at different velocities, distorting the envelope. If the wavepacket
has a narrow range of frequencies, and co(k) is approximately linear over that narrow range, the pulse
distortion will be small, in relation to the small nonlinearity. See further discussion below. For example, for
deep water gravity waves, O=V gk, and hence Vg=v, /2.
Solid line: A wave packet. Dashed
line: The envelope of the wave
packet. The envelope moves at the
group velocity
This underlies the Kelvin wake pattern for the bow wave of all ships and swimming objects. Regardless of
how fast they are moving, as long as their velocity is constant, on each side the wake forms an angle of
19.47° = aresin(1/3) with the line of travel.!6)
Derivation
One derivation of the formula for group velocity is as follows.!7Il8)
Consider a wave packet as a function of position x and time f: (x,t).
Let. A(k) be its Fourier transform at time f=0,
a(x,0) = f dk A(k)e*
By the superposition principle, the wavepacket at any time f is
st) =f akawyee,
where @ is implicitly a function of k.
‘Assume that the wave packet ais almost monochromatic, so that A(A) is sharply peaked around a central
wavenumber ko.
Then, linearization gives
w(h) ® an + (k— hou(see next section for discussion of this step). Then, after some algebra,
a(z,t)
slbozvot) f * ak Ale),
There are two factors in this expression. The first factor, e*?-40#) , describes a perfect monochromatic wave with
wavevector kg, with peaks and troughs moving at the phase velocity wo /ko within the envelope of the
‘wavepacket.
The other factor,
f ” ak A(R)et He,
gives the envelope of the wavepacket. This envelope function depends on position and time only through the
combination (a — wht)
Therefore, the envelope of the wavepacket travels at velocity
Wy = (dw/dk) imag »
which explains the group velocity formula,
Higher-order terms in dispersion
Part of the previous derivation is the Taylor KAAAAAARAARARARARARAAAARRARAA
series approximation that PAA
ADP AAD AD ADDL ADAPR RAS
wo(k) wo + (k — kro )u% (Ko)
ANI Yn irr
If the wavepacket has a relatively large frequency Distortion of wave groups by higher-order dispersion effects, for
spread, or if the dispersion (ky) has sharp surface gravity waves on deep water (with V_="4vp). The
variations (such as due to a resonance), or ifthe _ superposition of three wave components (with respectively 22, 25
packet travels over very long distances, thi and 29 meter wavelengths, fitting ina periodie horizontal domain
assumption is not valid, and higher-order terms of 2 km length) is shown, The wave amplitudes of the components
in the Taylor expansion become important. are respectively 1, 2 and 1 meter
As a result, the envelope of the wave packet not
only moves, but also distorts, in a manner that can be described by the material's group velocity dispersion,
Loosely speaking, different frequency-components of the wavepacket travel at different speeds, with the faster
components moving towards the front of the wavepacket and the slower moving towards the back. Eventually, the
wave packet gets stretched out. This is an important effect in the propagation of signals through optical fibers and
in the design of high-power, short-pulse lasers.
HistoryThe idea of a group velocity distinct from a wave's phase velocity was first proposed by W.R. Hamilton in 1839,
and the first full treatment was by Rayleigh in his "Theory of Sound" in 1877.1
Other expressions
For light, the refractive index n, vacuum wavelength Ag, and wavelength in the medium A, are related by
2re 2mvp
with vp = co/k the phase velocity
The group velocity, therefore, can be calculated by any of the following formulas,
In three dimensions
For waves traveling through three dimensions, such as light waves, sound waves, and matter waves, the formulas
for phase and group velocity are generalized in a straightforward way:!!°
‘One dimension: vp =w/k, vg =
Three dimensions: vy = ke,
where
View
means the gradient of the angular frequency © as a function of the wave vector k, and ie is the unit vector in
direction k.
If the waves are propagating through an anisotropic (i., not rotationally symmetric) medium, for example a
crystal, then the phase velocity vector and group velocity vector may point in different directions.
In lossy or gainful media
The group velocity is often thought of as the velocity at which energy or information is conveyed along a wave. In
most cases this is accurate, and the group velocity can be thought of as the signal velocity of the waveform.
However, if the wave is travelling through an absorptive or gainful medium, this does not always hold. In these
cases the group velocity may not be a well-defined quantity, or may not be a meaningful quantity.In his text “Wave Propagation in Periodic Structures”,!""] Brillouin argued that in a dissipative medium the group
velocity ceases to have a clear physical meaning. An example concerming the transmission of electromagnetic
waves through an atomic gas is given by Loudon.!!2] Another example is mechanical waves in the solar
photosphere: The waves are damped (by radiative heat flow from the peaks to the troughs), and related to that, the
energy velocity is often substantially lower than the waves' group velocity.!!3]
Despite this ambiguity, a common way to extend the concept of group velocity to complex media is to consider
spatially damped plane wave solutions inside the medium, which are characterized by a complex-valued
wavevector, Then, the imaginary part of the wavevector is arbitrarily discarded and the usual formula for group
velocity is applied to the real part of waveveetor, ic.,
Or, equivalently, in terms of the real part of complex refractive index, n = n+ix, one has!!4]
¢ on
S=ntum.
U% cm
It can be shown that this generalization of group velocity continues to be related to the apparent speed of the peak
of a wavepacket. The above definition is not universal, however: alternatively one may consider the time damping
of standing waves (real k, complex @), or, allow group velocity to be a complex-valued quantity.!'SIU'61 Different
considerations yield distinct velocities, yet all definitions agree for the case of a lossless, gainless medium,
The above generalization of group velocity for complex media can behave strangely, and the example of
anomalous dispersion serves as a good illustration. At the edges of a region of anomalous dispersion, ¥, becomes
infinite (surpassing even the speed of light in vacuum), and vg may easily become negative (its sign opposes Rek)
inside the band of anomalous dispersion.{!7IL!81!9)
Superluminal group velocities
Since the 1980s, various experiments have verified that it is possible for the group velocity (as defined above) of
laser light pulses sent through lossy materials, or gainful materials, to significantly exceed the speed of light in
vacuum c. The peaks of wavepackets were also seen to move faster than c.
Inall these cases, however, there is no possibility that signals could be carried faster than the speed of light in
vacuum, since the high value of Vg does not help to speed up the true motion of the sharp wavefront that would
14](071[18](20](21]
occur at the start of any real signal.
See also
Wave propagation
Dispersion (water waves)
Dispersion (optics)
‘Wave propagation speed
Group delay
Group velocity dispersion
Group delay
Phase delay
Phase velocity
Signal velocity
Slow light
Front velocity
Matter wave##Group velocity
SolitonReferences
Notes
1. Nemirovsky, Jonathan; Rechtsman, Mikael C; Segev, Mordechai (9 April 2012). "Negative radiation pressure and
negative effective refractive index via dielectric birefringence" (PDF). Optics Express. 20 (8): 8907-8914,
Bibcode:20120Expr..20.8907N. doi:10.1364/0E.20.008907. PMID 22513601.
2. Brillouin, Léon (2003) [1946], Have Propagation in Periodic Structures: Electric Filters and Crystal Lattices, Dover,
p. 75, ISBN 978-0-486-49556-9
Lighthill, James (2001) [1978], Waves in fluids, Cambridge University Press, p. 242, ISBN 978-0-521-01045-0
Lighthill (1965)
Hayes (1973)
GB. Whitham (1974). Linear and Nonlinear Waves (John Wiley & Sons Ine., 1974) pp 409-410 Onfine sean (hitps:/are
hive.org/details/LinearAndNonlineat Waves)
Griffiths, David J. (1995). Introduction to Quantum Mechanics. Prentice Hall. p. 48.
David K. Ferry (2001). Quantum Mechanics: An Introduction for Device Physicists and Electrical Engineers (2nd ed.)
CRC Press. pp. 18-19. ISBN 978-0-7503-0725-3.
9. Brillouin, Léon (1960), Wave Propagation and Group Velocity, New York: Academic Press Ine., OCLC 537250
10. Atmospheric and occanie fluid dynamics: fandamentals and large-scale circulation, by Geoffrey K. Vallis, p239 (https://bo
‘ks. google.com/books ?id-cCOKyeTnHEEC&pg-PA239)
11. Brillouin, L., (1946). Wave Propagation in Periodic Structures. New York: McGraw Hill
12. Loudon, R. (1973). The Quantum Theory of Light. Oxford,
13. Worrall, G. (2012). "On the Effect of Radiative Relaxation on the Flux of Mechanical-Wave Energy in the Solar
Atmosphere". Solar Physics. 279: 43-52. Bibcode:2012SoPh...279...43W. doi:10.1007/s11207-012-9982-z
14, Boyd, R. W.; Gauthier, D. J. (2009). "Controlling the velocity of light pulses". Science, 326 (5956): 1074-1,
Bibcode:2009Sci...326.1074B. doi:10.1126/science. 1170885. PMID 19965419,
15. Muschietti, L.; Dum, C. T. (1993), "Real group velocity in a medium with dissipation". Physics of Fluids B: Plasma
Physics. 5 (5): 1383. Bibcode:1993PhFIB...5.1383M. doi:10.1063/1.860877,
16. Gerasik, Vladimir; Stastna, Marek (2010). "Complex group velocity and energy transport in absorbing media". Physical
Review E. 81 (5): 056602. Bibcode:2010PHRYE..81c6602G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.$ 1.056602.
17. Dolling, Gunnar; Enkrich, Christian; Wegener, Martin; Soukoulis, Costas M.; Linden, Stefan (2006), "Simultaneous,
‘Negative Phase and Group Velocity of Light in a Metamaterial", Science, 312 (5775): 892-894,
Bibcode:2006Sci...312..892D, doi:10.1126/science. 1126021, PMID 16690860
18. Bigelow, Matthew S.; Lepeshkin, Nick N.; Shin, Heedeuk; Boyd, Robert W. (2006), "Propagation of a smooth and
discontinuous pulses through materials with very large or very small group velocities", Journal of Physics: Condensed
Matter, 18 (11): 3117-3126, Bibcode:2006JPCM...18.3117B, oi:10.1088/0953-8984/18/11/017
19. Withayachumnankul, W.; Fischer, B. M.; Ferguson, B.; Davis, B. R.; Abbott, D. (2010), "A Systemized View of
Superluminal Wave Propagation", Proceedings of the IEEE, 98 (10): 1775-1786, doi:10.1109/IPROC.2010.2052910
20. Gehring, George M.; Schweinsberg, Aaron; Barsi, Christopher; Kostinski, Natalie; Boyd, Robert W. (2006),
"Observation of a Backward Pulse Propagation Through a Medium with a Negative Group Velocity", Science, 312 (5775):
895-897, Bibcode:2006Sci...312..895G, doi:10.1126/science.1124524, PMID 16690861
21. Schweinsberg, A.; Lepeshkin, N. N.; Bigelow, M.S.; Boyd, R. W.; Jarabo, 8. (2005), "Observation of superluminal and
slow light propagation in erbium-doped optical fiber", Europhysics Letters, 73 (2): 218-224,
Bibcode:2006EL....73..218S, doi:10,1209/epl/i200S-10371-0
Further reading
= Crawford jr., Frank 8. (1968). Waves (Berkeley Physics Course, Vol. 3), McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0070048607 Free
online version (https://archive.org/details/Waves_371)
= Tipler, Paul A.; Llewellyn, Ralph A. (2003), Modern Physics (Ath ed.), New York: W. H. Freeman and Company, p. 223,
ISBN 0-7167-4345-0.
= Biot, M. A. (1957), "General theorems on the equivalence of group velocity and energy transport”, Physical Review, 10S
(4): 1129-1137, Bibcode:19S7PhRv..105.1129B, doi:10.1103/PhysRev. 105.1129«Whitham, G. B. (1961), "Group velocity and energy propagation for three-dimensional waves", Communications on Pure
and Applied Mathematics, 14 (3): 675-691, doi:10.1002/epa.3160140337
= Lighthill, M. J. (1965), "Group velocity", IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics, 1 (1): 1-28, doi:10.1093/imamat/1.1.1
= Bretherton, F. P,; Garrett, C. J. R, (1968), "Wavetrains in inhomogeneous moving media", Proceedings of the Royal
Society of London, Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 302 (1471): 529-554,
Bibcode:1968RSPSA. 302..529B, doi:10.1098/rspa.1968,0034
= Hayes, W. D. (1973), "Group velocity and nonlinear dispersive wave propagation", Proceedings of the Royal Society of
London, Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 332 (1589): 199-221, Bibcode:1973RSPSA.332..199H,
doi:10,1098/rspa.1973.0021
= Whitham, G. B. (1974), Linear and nonlinear waves, Wiley, ISBN 0471940909
External links
= Greg Egan has an excellent Java applet on his web site (http://gregegan.customer.netspace.net.aw/APPLETS/
20/20.html) that illustrates the apparent difference in group velocity from phase velocity.
= Maarten Ambaum has a webpage with movie (http://www.met.rdg.ac.uk/~sws97mha/Downstream/)
demonstrating the importance of group velocity to downstream development of weather systems,
= Phase vs. Group Velocity (http://myweb.dal.ca/fa814764/GroupAndPhase Velocities’) ~ Various Phase- and
Group-velocity relations (animation)
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Categories: Radio frequency propagation | Optics | Wave mechanics | Physical quantities | Mathematical physics
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