🎓 Student Exercises — Electromagnetics
Short, safe, structural prompts for building regime awareness
1. Identify the Primary Regime#
Using the Electromagnetics overview and the examples visible on the NIST Electromagnetics Publications page, answer:
- Which regime (R0, R1, R2, or R3) does this domain primarily operate in?
- What evidence supports your answer?
(Hint: Rydberg‑atom field imaging, 141‑GHz JCAS channel sounding, thin‑film permittivity, antenna‑gain extrapolation, and blackbody reflectivity characterization are all classic R3 activities.)
nist.gov
2. Upstream Assumptions#
Choose one electromagnetics concept from the publication list (e.g., “Rydberg‑atom angle‑of‑arrival detection,” “out‑of‑plane permittivity of thin films,” “JCAS channel sounding,” “digital‑twin multipath clustering,” “reverberation‑chamber correlation”) and identify:
- What coherence assumptions (R2) does this concept rely on?
- What operator assumptions (R0) might be implicit behind it?
Keep answers short — 1–2 sentences per layer.
nist.gov
3. Downstream Behavior#
Pick a specific NIST Electromagnetics activity or experiment (e.g., Rydberg‑atom field imaging, 141‑GHz near‑field beamforming, fused‑silica permittivity up to 325 GHz, antenna‑gain extrapolation, blackbody reflectivity, vital‑sign radar simulations) and describe:
- What is being measured, calibrated, or verified?
- How does this reflect R3 reasoning?
Use examples from the publication page.
nist.gov
4. Triadic Awareness Check#
In 3–4 sentences, explain how TriadicFrameworks could complement (not replace) NIST’s electromagnetics work by:
- clarifying upstream assumptions (R0–R2)
- supporting downstream measurement, calibration, and uncertainty modeling (R3)
This is an awareness exercise, not a critique.
5. Optional: Cross‑Domain Thinking#
Pick another NIST domain (e.g., Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry, Cybersecurity & Privacy) and compare:
- How does Electromagnetics’ regime alignment differ from that domain?
- What stays the same across both?
This helps students see structural patterns across the entire NIST landscape.