Physical degrees of freedom of an Electromagnetic field

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The discussion centers on the degrees of freedom (dof) of the electromagnetic field, initially suggesting six dof based on the electric and magnetic wave equations. However, it is clarified that Maxwell's equations impose four constraints, effectively reducing the physical dof to two. These remaining dof correspond to the two polarization vectors, ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}## and ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}##, which are orthogonal and satisfy specific conditions relative to the wave vector ##\mathbf{k}##. The final consensus is that the two physical degrees of freedom represent the independent choices for the components of these polarization vectors. This understanding aligns with established confirmations in related discussions.
Frank Castle
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As I understand it, the classical source-free electric, ##\mathbf{E}## and magnetic, ##\mathbf{B}## wave equations are solved by solutions for the electric and magnetic fields of the following form: $$\mathbf{E}=\mathbf{E}_{0}e^{i (\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{x}-\omega t)}$$ $$\mathbf{B}=\mathbf{B}_{0}e^{i (\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{x}-\omega t)}$$

Naively counting the degrees of freedom (dof) at this point it would appear that the electromagnetic field has 6 dof.

However, is it correct that Maxwell's equations provide 4 constraints: $$\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{E}_{0}=0 \\ \mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{B}_{0}=0$$ $$\mathbf{E}_{0}=-\frac{1}{\sqrt{\mu_{0}\varepsilon_{0}}}\mathbf{k}\times\mathbf{B}_{0}$$ and $$\mathbf{B}_{0}=\sqrt{\mu_{0}\varepsilon_{0}}\mathbf{k}\times\mathbf{E}_{0}$$
Thus reducing the number of physical dof to 2?!

If the above is correct what do these remaining dof correspond to? Are they simply the two possible polarisation (unit) vectors ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}##, ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}## that one can construct such that $$\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}=\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}=0$$ and $$\mathbf{k}\times\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}=\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}\\ \mathbf{k}\times\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}=-\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}$$ and hence ##\lbrace\mathbf{k},\;\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1},\;\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}\rbrace## form an orthornormal basis, such that the general solutions for ##\mathbf{E}## and ##\mathbf{B}## are linear combinations of ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}## and ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}##?!
 
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marcusl said:

Ok cool.
So are the two physical degrees of freedom simply the choice of a component for the polarisation ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}##, and the choice of a component for the polarisation vector ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}## (in principle, they both have 3 dof, but the requirement that ##\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}=\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}=0## and ##\mathbf{\epsilon}_{1}\cdot\mathbf{\epsilon}_{2}=0##, reduces their dof to one each)?
 
Yes, that's a nice way to put it.
 
marcusl said:
Yes, that's a nice way to put it.

Great. Thanks for your help.
 
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