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E-Field vs B-Field in SR |
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| Jul13-12, 07:40 PM | #18 |
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E-Field vs B-Field in SRI will try to examine the problem again adding some more electrons to my initial example, while avoiding any complicated interactions, but I fear that it could hardly yield any satisfying results... |
| Jul13-12, 08:49 PM | #19 |
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Also, don't forget that there is no such thing as a classical point charge, classical EM is runs into some irritating problems if you use point charges rather than charge distributions. Otherwise you have to do a full QED analysis, in which case you don't have a classical point charge either. |
| Jul14-12, 02:33 AM | #20 |
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Recognitions:
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| Jul14-12, 04:20 AM | #21 |
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| Jul14-12, 07:06 AM | #22 |
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http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic...eleration.html |
| Jul14-12, 07:32 AM | #23 |
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That is extremely interesting! Have you any books or papers, which elaborate that, to suggest? |
| Jul14-12, 07:42 AM | #24 |
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http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9712019/ |
| Jul14-12, 07:56 AM | #25 |
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| Jul14-12, 07:59 AM | #26 |
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| Jul14-12, 08:09 AM | #27 |
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| Jul14-12, 10:06 AM | #28 |
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| Jul15-12, 07:16 PM | #29 |
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An obvious point: there are pure, macroscopic B fields, but they are dipole plus higher moments. There is no B analog of a coulomb field without monopoles.
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| Jul15-12, 07:35 PM | #30 |
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We already know that the fundamental object representing the EM field is the Faraday tensor, [itex]F_{\mu \nu}[/itex]. This object can be called a bivector field--a field of oriented planes. The six components represent the six planes in a 3+1D spacetime: tx, ty, tz, yz, zx, xy. The first three, of course, correspond to the electric field; the other three correspond to the magnetic field. The full EM tensor is just a linear combination of these basis planes. This should also be suggestive: maybe we're wrong to consider the magnetic field a vector field. After all, the yz, zx, and xy planes exist in ordinary 3D space already. With that in mind, consider the magnetic field outside a straight current carrying wire and, in your mind, imagine instead the planes perpendicular to those field lines. What do you get? You get planes extending radially outward from this wire in a manner similar to a Coulomb field. The difference is that there is a translational symmetry along the direction of the wire. But, remember the electric field can be interpreted as planes also, just with one of the directions in the plane being the t direction. In this way, a stationary charge looks exactly like the current-carrying wire. It just goes in the t direction instead of a spatial direction. And the electric field (as planes) looks exactly like the magnetic field (as planes). This is why the straight current-carrying wire is as fundamental to magnetic fields as the stationary point charge is to electric fields. And while in most circles it's probably good enough to say there are no magnetic monopoles, I think this connection between the magnetic field from a wire and the electric field from a point charge is too significant to ignore. |
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