Navigating Purcell's Physics Course: Challenges & Solutions

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The discussion centers on challenges faced by a student using Purcell's physics textbook, particularly regarding its wordiness and lack of practice problem answers. The student expresses difficulty with applying concepts related to electric and magnetic fields in the context of relativity, despite finding relativity itself manageable. Participants suggest that solutions to many problems in Purcell can be found online and recommend alternative texts for clarity, such as Griffiths and Schwartz's "Principles of Electrodynamics." The student finds that reading Griffiths helped clarify their understanding, indicating that different explanations can significantly aid comprehension.
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My honors physics course is working with Purcell's textbook, but I've found some sections of the book are quite wordy and hard to follow, and i don't have any way to check my practice work: there are virtually no answers to any of the practice questions.
thanks in advance!
 
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Is it the relativity sections of Purcell that you are having trouble with?
 
ender2309 said:
... and i don't have any way to check my practice work: there are virtually no answers to any of the practice questions.

Not true. :smile: You are free to post your attempts at problems here and get feedback.
 
Daverz said:
Is it the relativity sections of Purcell that you are having trouble with?

yeah, not so much the actual relativity work (I've always found it to be more or less of a breeze), but the application to electric fields and magnetic fields.

essentially, my biggest problem right now comes down to magnetics. i know that E' parallel=E parallel and E' perpendicular is equal to gamma(Eperp+beta cross Bperp),

but i don't know how to apply that, at all.
 
Assuming you're interested in noble purposes, the solutions to a great many of the problems in Purcell are available somewhere online, simply through a google search.

Also, if you're having trouble comprehending the discussion of relativistic E&M in Purcell you're somewhat out of luck, since that's the lowest level introduction I know of (lower level texts usually don't go into it, and higher level texts like Griffiths have a more advanced approach). That said, it might be worth it to read the section in griffiths merely to give a different wording.
 
The only other undergrad book I know of that covers E&M from a relativistic standpoint is Schwartz's Principles of Electrodynamics. It is a beautiful book, but at a higher level than Purcell. Still it's inexpensive (Dover edition) and you might find it fills in gaps in understanding.
 
thanks! a friend of mine ended up having griffiths, and i guess it was just the way purcell explained it that tripped me up, because after reading the relevant sections there it cleared up immediately.
 
Jackson is what I use.
 
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