Is electromagnetic wave theory correct?

In summary: E and B vectors slightly rotated (and it is not possible to detect this without very sophisticated equipment!)In summary, Maxwell's correction to Ampère's law was crucial in deriving the electromagnetic wave equation. This equation linked the displacement current to the time-varying electric field and showed that light and magnetism are both electromagnetic disturbances. However, it is observed that light is not affected by magnetic or electric fields in a vacuum. This is because electric and magnetic forces act on charged particles, and electromagnetic radiation is uncharged. Additionally,
  • #1
Nickelodeon
181
1
The following statement came out of Wikipedia

"Maxwell's correction to Ampère's law was particularly important: In 1864 Maxwell derived the electromagnetic wave equation by linking the displacement current to the time-varying electric field that is associated with electromagnetic induction. This is described in A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field, where he commented:

The agreement of the results seems to show that light and magnetism are affections of the same substance, and that light is an electromagnetic disturbance propagated through the field according to electromagnetic laws."


What I find difficult to understand is that light, or any em wave, cannot be bent or distorted by a magnetic or electric field in a vacuum.

Now, get some iron filings, sprinkle them round a magnet and get another magnet and the iron filings will change their pattern indicating that the field has been distorted. I would have thought that light being an 'electromagnetic disturbance propagating through the field according to electromagnetic laws' would be seriously effected by an adjacent magnetic or electric field.

So the question is, 'why isn't it?'

Nick
 
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  • #2
The best answer is "because experimentally, it is observed to be this way".

If you want a more theoretical answer, it's because electric and magnetic forces act on charges and electromagnetic radiation is uncharged.
 
  • #3
Vanadium 50 said:
The best answer is "because experimentally, it is observed to be this way".

If you want a more theoretical answer, it's because electric and magnetic forces act on charges and electromagnetic radiation is uncharged.

I know that it is observed that way and I have no doubt that magnetic forces have no effect whatsoever on the passage of light. But wouldn't you have thought it should as magnetic forces can act on other magnetic forces apart from, obviously, moving charged particles.
 
  • #4
Nickelodeon said:
I know that it is observed that way and I have no doubt that magnetic forces have no effect whatsoever on the passage of light. But wouldn't you have thought it should as magnetic forces can act on other magnetic forces apart from, obviously, moving charged particles.

Nick

But magnetic forces *don't* act on other magnetic forces. As V50 pointed out, they act on *charged particles*.

In your magnet example, a better way to think about it is that the magnetic fields from the two magnets are added together, so that the total magnetic field is the sum of the two fields. This follows from the linearity of maxwell's equations.

In the case where an EM wave passes through a region where there is "pre-existing" E or B field, the EM field in that region *will* be different than outside the region. But once outside the region the wave is back to "normal" again. Also a consequence of linearity.
 
  • #5
weichi said:
In the case where an EM wave passes through a region where there is "pre-existing" E or B field, the EM field in that region *will* be different than outside the region. But once outside the region the wave is back to "normal" again. Also a consequence of linearity.

This infers that if you passed a laser beam through an area of a strong magnetic field you would see it go all fuzzy then come out straight and normal again. I don't think it would (not go fuzzy).
 
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  • #6
Nickelodeon said:
What I find difficult to understand is that light, or any em wave, cannot be bent or distorted by a magnetic or electric field in a vacuum. Nick

Light is an electromagnetic effect. Do you see light bending in the presence of light?
 
  • #7
Phrak said:
Light is an electromagnetic effect. Do you see light bending in the presence of light?

I don't think I'm getting my point across.
No one doubts that light is not bent or distorted by magnetic fields. My point is that, because light is purported to be a mutual supporting combination of electric and magnetic field then I have difficulty understanding why it can't be momentarily interfered with as it passes through an area of strong magnetic field.
Looking at it another way, converging transverse waves on water produce turbulence in the area they meet then come out the other side fine. How is it that with a laser beam through a strong magnetic field you cannot see this area of turbulence?
 
  • #8
Nickelodeon said:
Looking at it another way, converging transverse waves on water produce turbulence in the area they meet then come out the other side fine. How is it that with a laser beam through a strong magnetic field you cannot see this area of turbulence?

The reason is that the equations that describe the propagation of EM radiation in space (the Maxwell equations) are *linear* equations, while the equations that govern the propagation of surface waves on water have non-linear terms.

A linear set of equations has as a defining property that if A is a solution, and B is a solution, then A + B is also a solution. This is not the case for an equation that has non-linear parts.

If you take as "A" the initial traveling wave, and as "B" your "perturbing" field (another wave, a strong magnetic field etc...) then you see that the presence or not of B has no influence on A in the case of a linear set of equations, but does so in the case of a non-linear set, because then A + B is no solution anymore, but something like A' + B', with A' a modification of A and B' a modification of B (although we don't care about that last one).
 
  • #9
To expand on what vanesch said. An equation which is linear (like Maxwell's) is said to obey the principle of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superposition_principle" [Broken].
 
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  • #10
Nickelodeon said:
This infers that if you passed a laser beam through an area of a strong magnetic field you would see it go all fuzzy then come out straight and normal again. I don't think it would (not go fuzzy).

I didn't say anything about fuzzy :smile:! You would get the sum (superposition as DaleSpam said) of the EM wave and the "pre-existing" magnetic field. This is not the same as saying that the light would get "fuzzy.

It means that if you put, say, a light detector in the region then it's behavior would be determined by the "total" field. If the detectors is unaffected by a constant magnetic field (which is true of many, though perhaps not all, detectors of light), then you would get the same response as outside the region. So not fuzzy.

On the other hand, if you put a test particle into the region, it's behavior *would*be different than outside the region, because it feels the effect of both the constant magnetic field and of the EM wave.
 
  • #11
Pure propagating electromagnetic fields, free of matter, combine in the simplest possible way, but the fields act back on their derivatives, such as [itex]\nabla \cdot E[/itex].
 
  • #12
Phrak said:
Pure propagating electromagnetic fields, free of matter, combine in the simplest possible way, but the fields act back on their derivatives, such as [itex]\nabla \cdot E[/itex].

Well, "derivative" is also a linear operation: if A is a field, then [itex] \nabla \cdot A[/itex] is its divergence, and if B is a field, then [itex] \nabla \cdot B[/itex] is its divergence, and if we now have the combined field C = A + B, then [itex] \nabla \cdot C =\nabla \cdot A + \nabla \cdot B[/itex]

So in whatever linear equation we have A (including its divergence) as a solution, and B is also a solution, then A + B remains also a solution.

If A is a wave, propagating to the north, and B is a strong field in some domain, that means that outside of that domain, the solution A is valid, and we can add, or not, the field B, it won't change the field outside of that domain (which remains A). In other words, on the "receiving side" we will just see A (if we are outside of B's domain), and this will not change, whether we "switch on" B or not.
 
  • #13
We have nothing to discuss, Mr. Vanesh. Period.
 
  • #14
Phrak said:
We have nothing to discuss, Mr. Vanesh. Period.

I didn't know what you meant with your comment, and I interpreted this that you might be suggesting that the fact that derivatives are present in electromagnetic theory might cause one field to influence the derivative of the other or something of the kind. Not that you said this explicitly, but otherwise I don't understand what you wanted to say in the frame of this discussion.
(of course the derivative of a field depends on the field itself...but what does it have to do with this discussion ?)
 
  • #15
Thanks for everyone's input.

I've sort of been left with the conclusion you can't have an omnidirectional transverse wave because you run out of dimensions. That's why it is impossible to visualise.
Waving lengths of string, especially in a circular motion, as previously described in this thread and elsewhere points nicely to another solution to the nature of light.


Take one hydrogen atom and excite it just long enough to produce one photon. What I suggest you will see is a unidirectional, or maybe bidirectional, twinkle with a wavelength proportional to the energy required to produce it. This small wavelength packet carries on its way until it bumps into something.

So take lots of hydrogen atoms and excite them to produce photons and what you experience now is a cacophany of twinkles in all directions, following on behind and adjacent to each other, but separate.

The good thing is that 'twinkles' can have the transverse wave characteristics, the helical correlation between a magnetic and electric field, for example. Another bonus is that waving a magnet in the vicinity of a packet will have little effect as the packet is essentially bipolar.
 
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  • #16
Phrak said:
We have nothing to discuss, Mr. Vanesh. Period.

Uh-oh. I detect some animosity.
 
  • #17
DaleSpam said:
To expand on what vanesch said. An equation which is linear (like Maxwell's) is said to obey the principle of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superposition_principle" [Broken].

Perhaps I'm not completely understanding the question, but I think DaleSpam said all that needed to be. The magnetic fields in your iron filings experiment aren't being modified or transformed by each other, they are simply being superimposed and they will interfere with each other. For an example that involves light, think of interferometry.
 
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  • #18
Thanks Topher925, I also agree with that assessment, but I am obviously biased! :smile:
 
  • #19
I think the Iron filings that you are speaking of are not in fact showing evidence of a distortion of the magnetic fields upon each other, but just how a ferrous material is reacting to the two separate fields.??
 
  • #20
Bitzy7 said:
I think the Iron filings that you are speaking of are not in fact showing evidence of a distortion of the magnetic fields upon each other, but just how a ferrous material is reacting to the two separate fields.??

That's a very interesting point and a bit difficult to figure out whether the fields are actually separate or combined. Personally, I think they are combined because a magnetic field round a magnet is not a wave as such (could be a standing wave I suppose).
 
  • #21
That is kind of the point of the principle of superposition. You can consider it as one total field or the sum of multiple separate fields. The results are the same.
 
  • #22
DaleSpam said:
That is kind of the point of the principle of superposition. You can consider it as one total field or the sum of multiple separate fields. The results are the same.

Interesting. Of course, I know this already. The interesting part is that superposition works for a space-like slice, R^3, rather than all, or some part of spacetime, where a superposition fails when there is charge present.

It's rather peculiar, if you think about it. Superpostion works for every inertial frame, v<c, at all points in spacetime---any boost, any rotation and any translation of coordinates. It works perfectly well on a (3,1) pseudo Riemann manifold (because the field equations are manifestly covariant). Yet it doesn't work on the manifold as a whole.

Does it work in v>c? Dunno.)
 
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  • #23
Phrak said:
Light is an electromagnetic effect. Do you see light bending in the presence of light?
Can't 2 light beams attract towards each other or maybe you meant something else.
 

1. Is electromagnetic wave theory the only explanation for the behavior of light?

No, there are other theories that attempt to explain the behavior of light, such as the particle theory of light proposed by Isaac Newton. However, electromagnetic wave theory has been extensively tested and has been the most successful in explaining the characteristics of light.

2. How does electromagnetic wave theory explain the speed of light?

According to electromagnetic wave theory, light is composed of electric and magnetic fields that oscillate perpendicular to each other and travel through space at a constant speed of 299,792,458 meters per second. This speed is determined by the properties of free space, such as its electric permittivity and magnetic permeability.

3. Is there any evidence that supports electromagnetic wave theory?

Yes, there is a vast amount of evidence that supports electromagnetic wave theory. For example, experiments such as the double-slit experiment and the photoelectric effect have demonstrated the wave-like and particle-like behavior of light, which is predicted by electromagnetic wave theory.

4. Can electromagnetic wave theory explain the different colors of light?

Yes, electromagnetic wave theory can explain the different colors of light. The wavelength of a light wave determines its color, with shorter wavelengths corresponding to higher frequencies and colors like blue and violet, and longer wavelengths corresponding to lower frequencies and colors like red and orange.

5. Are there any limitations or challenges to electromagnetic wave theory?

While electromagnetic wave theory has been successful in explaining many phenomena related to light, it has some limitations and challenges. For instance, it does not fully explain the behavior of light at the quantum level and cannot account for the effects of gravity on light. Additionally, there are still unanswered questions about the nature of electromagnetic waves, such as their interaction with matter.

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