Savant13
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I'm working with Maxwell's equations, and I have found the curl of a magnetic field at all points. How can I figure out what the magnetic field is at those points?
Savant13 said:In this case, the magnetic field is being created by an electric dipole consisting of two point particles of equal mass and opposite charge in mutual orbit, not a current, so the Biot-Savart law doesn't apply
weichi said:Ben is of course correct - there *is* a current here. It would be a good exercise to calculate it! Note that this is, in a sense, a "baby" version of the problem you are asking about, but in this case you need to find a vector field who's *divergence* you know.
But once you calculate the current, Biot-Savart isn't going to help you. Do you see why?
Savant13 said:Is it because the current is not constant?
weichi said:Ben is of course correct - there *is* a current here. It would be a good exercise to calculate it! Note that this is, in a sense, a "baby" version of the problem you are asking about, but in this case you need to find a vector field who's *divergence* you know.
But once you calculate the current, Biot-Savart isn't going to help you. Do you see why?
Savant13 said:I think I know how I can do this.
Is it possible for a vector field to be perpendicular to its divergence at a point?