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Physics
Classical Physics
Electromagnetism
Decompose the E field into conservative and non-conservative parts
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[QUOTE="SDL, post: 6826419, member: 731110"] If you assume this (at least no [B][I]time-varying[/I][/B] magnetic field in the external space), then the lumped element model is valid and all EMFs in the circuit are produced by [B][I]only potential[/I][/B] electric fields so you don't need to "split" anything. If an electric field is potential, then you are legal to introduce a potential function, so every node in your circuit will be assigned a scalar value. Sum of potential differencies (i.e. voltage drops) around every closed loop in the circuit equals to zero. This is exactly what Kirchhoff's Voltage Law states. [/QUOTE]
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Forums
Physics
Classical Physics
Electromagnetism
Decompose the E field into conservative and non-conservative parts
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