Intensity (physics)
In physics and many other areas of science and engineering the intensity or flux of radiant energy is the power transferred per unit area, where the area is measured on the plane perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the energy. In the SI system, it has units watts per square metre, or kg⋅s−3 in base units. Intensity is used most frequently with waves such as acoustic waves, matter waves such as electrons in electron microscopes, and electromagnetic waves such as light or radio waves, in which case the average power transfer over one period of the wave is used. Intensity can be applied to other circumstances where energy is transferred. For example, one could calculate the intensity of the kinetic energy carried by drops of water from a garden sprinkler.
The word "intensity" as used here is not synonymous with "strength", "amplitude", "magnitude", or "level", as it sometimes is in colloquial speech.
Intensity can be found by taking the energy density at a point in space and multiplying it by the velocity at which the energy is moving. The resulting vector has the units of power divided by area. The intensity of a wave is proportional to the square of its amplitude. For example, the intensity of an electromagnetic wave is proportional to the square of the wave's electric field amplitude.
Mathematical description
The intensity or flux of electromagnetic radiation is equal to the time average of the Poynting vector over the wave's period. For radiation propagating through a typical medium the energy density of the radiation,, is related to the Poynting vector bywhich is derived from Poynting's theorem.
Integrating over a volume of space gives
where is the energy of the electromagnetic radiation.
Applying the divergence theorem, the rate of flow of energy out of the volume is seen to be related to the surface integral of the Poynting vector over the surface of the volume of space:
Point sources
A common example is the intensity or flux of a point source of given power output. Considering a spherical volume centered on the source, the formula above becomeswhere the angle brackets denote a time average over the period of the waves. Since the surface area of a sphere of radius is this gives
therefore the intensity from the point source at distance is
This is known as the inverse-square law.
Electromagnetic waves
For a monochromatic propagating electromagnetic wave such as a plane wave or a Gaussian beam travelling in a non-magnetic medium, the time-averaged Poynting vector is related to the amplitude of the electric field,, bywhere is the speed of light in vacuum, is the refractive index of the medium, and is the vacuum permittivity.
The relationship to intensity can also be seen by considering the time-averaged energy density of the wave:
The local intensity is just the energy density times the wave velocity :
For non-monochromatic waves, the intensity contributions of different spectral components can simply be added.
The treatment above does not hold for arbitrary electromagnetic fields, but it is still often true that the magnitude of the time-averaged Poynting vector is proportional to the time-averaged energy density by a factor :
An evanescent wave may have a finite electrical amplitude while not transferring any power. The intensity of an evanescent wave can be defined as the magnitude of the Poynting vector.