E&M and beyond books for very mathematically adept

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A user seeks a more mathematically rigorous Electricity and Magnetism textbook that effectively integrates calculus concepts without oversimplifying. They express dissatisfaction with their current textbook's approach, which lacks depth in mathematical explanations. Recommendations include "A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equations," noted for its clear presentation of both integral and differential forms of Maxwell's equations, and "The Feynman Lectures vol. 2," which explains mathematics in a physical context. Other suggested texts include Purcell's and J.D. Jackson's works, with Jackson's book praised for its concise mathematical treatment, although it may be challenging for someone transitioning directly from multivariable calculus. Overall, the discussion emphasizes the need for a textbook that balances physical intuition with mathematical rigor.
Lanza52
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I'm looking for a Electricity and Magnetism (and beyond if possible) textbook that suits my capabilities better. I just read "Electric flux is proportional to the amount of electric field lines penetrating some surface" in my current textbook. I find that this is for the mathematical incapable. It tends to avoid any usage of integrals or derivatives.

I took Multivariable Calculus this past semester and did phenomenal. I'm extraordinarily good at understanding concepts and applying mathematics to describe the concept: ie what Calculus is all about. But that's not to say I'm good at math. I'm terrible with abstract math because I tend to approach everything by trying to understand the reality first and then letting the numbers fall into place.

So, back story aside; I'm looking for opinions about a textbook that is for the much more mathematically capable, but not one that says "flux is F dot dr" and leaves it as an abstraction. I guess a book that vividly explains the concept physically and then describes how it works with calculus without holding back in fear of offending the integral-challenged.

Any opinions?

Thanks!
 
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For E&M A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equations https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521701473/?tag=pfamazon01-20 has both the integral and differential forms of the 4 Maxwell equations as well as explains why there is a dot product used in certain formulas as well as other del operators. It is at a slightly higher level than what most probably learn in Calc III, but it is very accessible to those who have taken it. The only thing it adds to a Calc III class is that it take surface integrals in spherical and cylindrical coordinates. It is a very small at about 130 pages of material, but it is far denser than most books you have probably seen and will take you a bit longer per page than normal, but it should be what you are looking for. And it's cheap too!
 
The Feynman Lectures vol. 2. He explains the math in a physical fashion.

But there are many good undergraduate E&M texts that will also fit the bill. Search this forum for recommendations.
 
Purcell is the way to go.
 
J.D. Jackson wrote a good book on classical electrodynamics. He uses pretty decent mathematics, not too much wording.
 
dextercioby said:
J.D. Jackson wrote a good book on classical electrodynamics. He uses pretty decent mathematics, not too much wording.

Going directly from multivariable calculus to Jackson might be a bit of a stretch for the OP. I suppose it wouldn't hurt to check it out at the library.
 
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I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...

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