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Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 129145

Roads to Maxwell's Equations


Šterc, Davor; Butković, Davor; Mikuličić, Vladimir
Roads to Maxwell's Equations // Proceedings of PIERS 2002 Progress in Electromagnetic Research Symposium
Cambridge (MA): The Electromagnetic Academy, 2002. (predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, sažetak, znanstveni)


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Naslov
Roads to Maxwell's Equations

Autori
Šterc, Davor ; Butković, Davor ; Mikuličić, Vladimir

Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni

Izvornik
Proceedings of PIERS 2002 Progress in Electromagnetic Research Symposium / - Cambridge (MA) : The Electromagnetic Academy, 2002

Skup
PIERS 2002 Progress in Electromagnetic Research Symposium

Mjesto i datum
Cambridge (MA), Sjedinjene Američke Države, 01.07.2002. - 05.07.2002

Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje

Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija

Ključne riječi
Electromagnetic Theory; Maxwell's Equations

Sažetak
This paper introduces several new derivations of Maxwell's equations which vary considerably in content and perspective. They are designed to span as much ground as possible and explore the roads less traveled. The first one is a Dirac-like inference&#8213 ; it is based on enforcing the generalized Huygens principle by pulling a sort of a square root out of the free wave equation for a vector field. This field, which is later identified as the Faraday field, must be transversal for the procedure to work&#8213 ; this is justified both by experiments and symmetry arguments. The second derivation appears as a variation of the first one. The arguments are applied in a reverse order&#8213 ; transversality is the starting point and the wave equation is deployed in the end to fix the linear operator that governs the time evolution as demanded by the Huygens principle. The third one is a potential-based reasoning&#8213 ; it shifts the perspective since in classical electrodynamics introduction of the potentials seems to serve merely as a calculational convenience. Here, the D'Alembertian is not split right away&#8213 ; instead, the implications of applying a source (current) are considered. Demanding the transversality at this point kills the longitudinal component of the current&#8213 ; and spoils the locality which is the reason for having a field theoretic description in the first place. The rescue comes from the conservation of charge which permits us to trade a manifestly nonlocal term for an additional field component. Consequently, the D'Alembertian is split more naturally and a radiation gauge emerges. The fourth road is yet another potential-based approach&#8213 ; this time with emphasize on gauge invariance. Careful examination shows that the previous inference might have applied the transversality condition overzealously&#8213 ; even where experiments did not indicate it was necessary&#8213 ; at the location of the source. Hence, locality need not be spoiled entirely&#8213 ; only locality in time, but not in space, is to be sacrificed and no new degrees of freedom (fields) are required&#8213 ; so a temporal gauge comes out. In effect, this means removing the longitudinal part of the Laplacian (instead of the current). The fifth derivation has a more traditional taste&#8213 ; it focuses on mending Ampere's law through a series of approximations. They come from projecting out the longitudinal part of the current and repairing the damage it does to locality by adding further nonlocal terms containing time-derivatives. The result is recognized as a Born series expansion for the Green function of the D'Alembertian&#8213 ; temporal derivatives are treated pertubatively, which is the essence of quasistatic approximations. It proves beneficial to compare these approaches with the derivations of Maxwell, Feynman, Schwinger and Weinberg. Gilbert Strang wrote that &#8220 ; a revolution [in a textbook presentation] is very likely to end at 2&#61552 ; &#8221 ; &#8213 ; and this appears to apply very well here&#8213 ; the derivations we have presented start from dynamic considerations close to the modern elementary particle physics and gradually arrive very close to Maxwell's original ansatz. We are inclined to perceive this more as a blessing than a curse displaying the curvature of our minds.

Izvorni jezik
Engleski

Znanstvena područja
Elektrotehnika



POVEZANOST RADA


Projekti:
0036043

Ustanove:
Fakultet elektrotehnike i računarstva, Zagreb

Profili:

Avatar Url Davor Šterc (autor)

Avatar Url Davor Butković (autor)

Avatar Url Vladimir Mikuličić (autor)


Citiraj ovu publikaciju:

Šterc, Davor; Butković, Davor; Mikuličić, Vladimir
Roads to Maxwell's Equations // Proceedings of PIERS 2002 Progress in Electromagnetic Research Symposium
Cambridge (MA): The Electromagnetic Academy, 2002. (predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, sažetak, znanstveni)
Šterc, D., Butković, D. & Mikuličić, V. (2002) Roads to Maxwell's Equations. U: Proceedings of PIERS 2002 Progress in Electromagnetic Research Symposium.
@article{article, author = {\v{S}terc, Davor and Butkovi\'{c}, Davor and Mikuli\v{c}i\'{c}, Vladimir}, year = {2002}, pages = {628}, keywords = {Electromagnetic Theory, Maxwell and \#39, s Equations}, title = {Roads to Maxwell and \#39;s Equations}, keyword = {Electromagnetic Theory, Maxwell and \#39, s Equations}, publisher = {The Electromagnetic Academy}, publisherplace = {Cambridge (MA), Sjedinjene Ameri\v{c}ke Dr\v{z}ave} }
@article{article, author = {\v{S}terc, Davor and Butkovi\'{c}, Davor and Mikuli\v{c}i\'{c}, Vladimir}, year = {2002}, pages = {628}, keywords = {Electromagnetic Theory, Maxwell and \#39, s Equations}, title = {Roads to Maxwell and \#39;s Equations}, keyword = {Electromagnetic Theory, Maxwell and \#39, s Equations}, publisher = {The Electromagnetic Academy}, publisherplace = {Cambridge (MA), Sjedinjene Ameri\v{c}ke Dr\v{z}ave} }




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