DEFINITIONS
The title of this chapter should raise a question or two: Precisely what is the definition of RF? Of microwave? We use these terms in the preceding chapter, but purposely without offering a quantitative definition. Some texts use absolute frequency as a discriminator (e.g., “microwave is anything above 1 GHz”). However, the meaning of those words has changed over time, suggesting that distinctions based on absolute frequency lack fundamental weight. Indeed, in terms of engineering practice and design intuition, it is far more valuable to base a classification on a comparison of the physical dimensions of a circuit element with the wavelengths of signals propagating through it.
When the circuit's physical dimensions are very small compared to the wavelengths of interest, we have the realm of ordinary circuit theory, as we will shortly understand. We will call this the quasistatic, lumped, or low-frequency realm, regardless of the actual frequency value. The size inequality simplifies Maxwell's equations considerably, allowing one to invoke the familiar concepts of inductances, capacitances, and Kirchhoff 's “laws” of current and voltage.
If, on the other hand, the physical dimensions are very large compared to the wavelengths of interest, then we say that the system operates in the classical optical regime – whether or not the signals of interest correspond to visible light. Devices used to manipulate the energy are now structures such as mirrors, polarizers, lenses, and diffraction gratings. Just as in the quasistatic realm, the size inequality enables considerable simplifications in Maxwell's equations.