Questions tagged [maxwell-equations]

A set of four equations that define electrodynamics. They comprise the Gauss laws for the electric and magnetic fields, the Faraday law, and the Ampère law. Together, these equations uniquely determine the electric and magnetic fields of a physical system. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, or the thermodynamical equations known as Maxwell's relations.

Usage.

A set of four equations that define electrodynamics. They comprise the Gauss laws for the electric and magnetic fields, the Faraday law, and the Ampère law. Together, these equations uniquely determine the electric and magnetic fields of a physical system. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, or the thermodynamical equations known as Maxwell's relations.

Background.

Electrodynamics is the discipline that studies the behaviour of non-static electric and magnetic fields, $\vec E,\vec B$. These are functions of space and time, and are postulated to satisfy a system of four partial differential equations, to wit, \begin{align} \nabla\cdot\vec E&=4\pi\rho\\ \nabla\cdot\vec B&=0\\ \nabla\times\vec E&=-\frac{1}{c}\frac{\partial\vec B}{\partial t}\\ \nabla\times\vec B&=\frac{1}{c}\left(4\pi\vec j+\frac{\partial\vec E}{\partial t}\right) \end{align} where $\rho$ is the so-called charge density, and $\vec j$ the current density; these two functions are said to be the sources of $\vec E,\vec B$. Even in the absence of sources, the Maxwell equations lead to a very rich phenomenology.

The equations above, together with some appropriate boundary conditions, determine the value of the electric and magnetic fields uniquely. Given the fields $\vec E,\vec B$, one may study their effect on electrically charged objects by means of the so-called Lorentz force, $$ \vec F=q\ (\vec E+\vec v\times\vec B) $$ which determines the time evolution of point particles and, by extension, to any extended body.

For more information, see .

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Is it true that Maxwell equations are interpreted by taking right side of formula as the "origin" and the left part as "consequence"?

When books or various references interpret the meaning of Maxwell equations, they typically state that the source (origin of the phenomena) is the right part of the formula, and the resulting effect is on the left part of the formula. For example,…
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Is there any particular reason why Faraday's and Ampère's laws are valid?

I know that the Maxwell equations are usually the explanation for all electromagnetic phenomena, but I would like to know why those are valid, if there is any reason for them.
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Example of Maxwell Equations with 24 boundary conditions

In Christopher Bairds supplementary notes on the Uniqueness of Maxwell Equations, he says that in full generality one needs 24 boundary conditions to uniquely determine a solution of Maxwells equations. However, I have never actually seen a problem…
Denn
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Does electric field generated by changing magnetic flux generate an opposing magnetic field?

According to Faraday's law a changing flux through a loop will create an Electric-field curling around that loop. And if the loop is a conducting wire the current looping will create an opposing magnetic field as below(Lenz): But what if there is…
user1245
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Analytical solution to Maxwell's equations in 3D

I'm working on solving Maxwell's equation numerically and have implemented Yee's algorithm in Matlab. In order to check if the algorithm is implemented succesfully, I need an analytical solution to the problmen. So given the Maxwell's equations on…
harisf
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How seriously should I take the notion of "magnetic current density"

Increasingly I've noticed that people are using a curious quantity $\vec M$ to denote something called magnetic current density in the formulation of the maxwell's equations where instead of $\nabla \times \vec E = - \partial_t\vec B$, you would…
Fraïssé
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What is the exact vectorial analytical expression for the electric field of a laguerre-gauss beam?

When the paraxial approximation for the Laguerre-Gauss beams breaks down? In such cases, what is the right analytical expression for the electric field of the Laguerre-Gauss beams, for any radial and azimuthal indexes p and l? I have gone through…
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Maxwell equations and Fourier decomposition

I'm currently working on maxwell equations and in order to lower the fields dimension, we perform a Fourier decomposition (according to $\theta$) due to the system symmetry. For any vector field $\mathbf{U}(r, \theta, z)$, we have, $$…
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Does Faraday-Maxwell equation exclusively refer to a variable magnetic field instead to a variable magnetic fux?

Faraday's law says that a variable magnetic flux produces an induced emf. A varying flux can be due to a varying magnetic field or a varying surface. The Faraday-Maxwell equation refers to a curl electric field produced by a variable magnetic field.…
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Maxwell Equations E,B Power Series

I am trying to solve Hughston Tod's Problem 2.13 and 2.14: Suppose that $E_i$ and $B_i$ can each be developed into a power series in time: $E_i=\sum t^n E_i^n$, $B_i=\sum t^n B_i^n$ where the index $n$ (not a tensor index) runs from zero to…
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Generalisation of Maxwell's equations

The electromagnetic action in the language of differential geometry is given by $$\displaystyle{S \sim \int F \wedge \star F},$$ where $A$ is the one-form potential and $F={\rm d}A$ is the two-form field strength. At the extremum of the action $S$,…
nightmarish
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How are plane waves, $p$-forms, and Maxwell's equations related?

I am very new to the concepts of $p$-forms and trying to get a better grasp of physicist use them to state Maxwell's equations. Wikipedia has a picture of a plane wave http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plane_wave I presume this is used to represent…
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Why can't you use sunlight as the source of changing magnetic flux for Faraday's law?

Why can't you use sunlight as the source of changing magnetic flux for Faraday's law? Is sunlight not partially made of an undulating magnetic field? Edit: Use plane polarized sunlight that is made coherent?
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Different notation for maxwell equations

I found in a book the Maxwell equations written in a form different that other books and wikipedia, \begin{align} \nabla\cdot E &=\frac{\rho}{\epsilon_0}\\ \nabla\cdot B &=0\\ \nabla \times E &=\frac{\partial B}{\partial t}\\ \nabla \times B…
user323132
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Usability of the Maxwell-Ampère equation outside the region of the current

If the Maxwell-Ampère equation is written in the form, $$\begin{align}\nabla \times H = \dfrac{\partial D}{\partial t} + J\end{align}$$ that the both sides of the equation will be zero. So the Maxwell-Ampère equation should be unuseful outside the…
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