What Are the Prerequisites for Purcell's Electromagnetism?

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SUMMARY

The prerequisites for studying Purcell's "Electricity and Magnetism" include a solid understanding of vector calculus, multivariate calculus, and special relativity. Familiarity with basic mechanics concepts such as Newton's laws and energy is also essential. Students are advised to have a background in differential equations, particularly methods like separation of variables. The third edition of Purcell's book is recommended for its updated content, but readers should be aware of its complexity and the potential for confusion in its presentation.

PREREQUISITES
  • Vector calculus
  • Multivariate calculus
  • Special relativity (Lorentz transformations, time dilation)
  • Basic differential equations (separation of variables)
NEXT STEPS
  • Study "Dover's Book on Partial Differential Equations" for an introduction to wave equations.
  • Learn "A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equations" by Daniel Fleisch for a deeper understanding of electromagnetism.
  • Review "University Physics" by Young and Freedman for a solid foundation in special relativity.
  • Explore "Morin" for upper-division mechanics concepts that complement Purcell's material.
USEFUL FOR

Students preparing for upper-undergraduate-level courses in electromagnetism, particularly those transitioning from high school physics to college-level studies. This discussion is beneficial for anyone looking to strengthen their understanding of the mathematical foundations necessary for Purcell's text.

RubinLicht
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I know for sure that being familiar with vector Calc, multivariate Calc, and special relativity is helpful. What I mean by prerequisites is anything that would be helpful to know. For example, a textbook may include an appendix, or chapter on the mathematics required, but I'd much rather learn the topic separately and with a much higher quality.
 
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Agreed - so what is the question?
 
Simon Bridge said:
Agreed - so what is the question?
Whether or not there is something else I missed that I'll need for purcell

I know that the wave equation is a partial differential equation, so I could just buy dovers book on pdes for a quick introduction. I will probably also need to learn a little bit more about differential equations, so far, I only know some simple methods of solving (separation of variables, and the factoring trick for second order differs for forced oscillations/damped
 
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Your list is exhaustive - students usually struggle if their vector calc/analysis is weak.
The book is otherwise pretty well written - make sure you have one as up to date as possible since you may have trouble from it being old.
The concepts are fine - it's the teaching and learning styles that have changed.
 
Simon Bridge said:
Your list is exhaustive - students usually struggle if their vector calc/analysis is weak.
The book is otherwise pretty well written - make sure you have one as up to date as possible since you may have trouble from it being old.
The concepts are fine - it's the teaching and learning styles that have changed.
I'll be using the third edition which has si units, Thanks for the help!
 
No worries - cheers.
 
Well, SI units make electrodynamics more complicated than necessary. Much of the beauty of the relativistic structure is hidden under conversion factors of units. Also Purcell seems to be sometimes confusing. We had long discussions about it, and there are many people who like the book very much; so maybe I'm wrong, but I'd prefer either Landau&Lifshitz vol. II which gives also a relativistic treatment of electromagnetism from the very beginning as it should be or (more in the spirit of Purcell to derive as much as possible from electrostatics + relativity but without the laborious didactics) Schwartz, Principles of Electrodynamics, Dover.
 
I don't think it is more complicated so much as messier when written down, like the need for extra constants to scale things to the right units.
Physics moves into unified units soon enough - modern students are familiar with the SI system. I think the effort old texts make to reconcile students to the SI system shows that people just find the system they grew up with to be more intuitive.

I think Purcell is boring myself ... probably just the writing style conflicting with the way I read.
 
When I was a student (late '60s), we used vol. 1 (Mechanics) and vol. 2 (Purcell's text) of the Berkeley Physics Course in our first course in physics. I think you are ready for Purcell if you are familiar with vector calculus, basic concepts of mechanics (e.g., Newton's laws, vectors, work, energy, angular momentum), and basic special relativity (Lorentz transformation, length contraction, time dilation, velocity addition formulas). Actually, much of the vector calculus is nicely developed from scratch in Purcell.

I really like Purcell's book. I think it provides a lot of physical insight. It did a great job preparing me for the upper-undergraduate-level course in electromagnetism.
 
  • #10
I may be in the minority, but I think having a basic understanding of elementary electromagnetism would be very helpful. I had never learned any aspect of electromagnetism before Purcell and found it to be a little too much; students in the class who had better high-school backgrounds (some had learned electromagnetism from Halliday and Resnick in high school) found it much more digestible. I think Purcell is a great book, but am not convinced it is the best for a very first exposure to this beautiful subject.

jason
 
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  • #11
Simon Bridge said:
I think Purcell is boring myself ... probably just the writing style conflicting with the way I read.
I don't think it's boring. It is one of the early attempts to teach electromagnetism in a modern way and not to confuse students with the usual non-relativsitic treatment of the sources and then making up puzzling paradoxa like "hidden momentum" that in fact were solved very quickly after Einstein discovered special relativity. I think at latest in 1912 von Laue came up with the correct solution to all these problems. Nevertheless it's still taught the old pre-relativistic way in even some newer textbooks. Only at the very end you find a brief chapter on "relativistic electrodynamics", which in fact is a tautology, because electrodynamics is a relativistic field theory since Maxwell discovered it, although this was hidden for almost half a century, and it was Einstein's real breakthrough to figure out that one has to change the spacetime model affecting entire physics, including the "mechanical part" and not only electromagnetism. Thus that's how electromagnetism should be taught since 1905.

However, the book by Purcell is overly complicated and sometimes confusing, as the long debates we had about it some time ago in these forums. In my opinion one should start right away with the mathematical description of special relativistic spacetime in terms of the covariant formalism a la Minkowski (of course not with the confusing introduction of imaginary times but as a real pseudo-Euclidean affine space; imaginary times are needed only in quantum statistics and they have nothing to do with relativity) and then use simple relativistic models for matter, i.e., charge-current distributions, to present electromagnetism in a manifestly covariant way.

The SI is a pest in electromagnetism. Why should electric and magnetic components of the one and only electromagnetic field be measured in different units? Of course, sometimes we are used to that. In the US distances on the road are measured in miles, and the height of mountains or bridges in feet and inches, but that seems not to be too attractive. You can even argue, why to measure distances and times in different units and not setting ##c=1## right from the beginning. I don't think that latter idea is a good one, because indeed spatical and temporal directions are dinstinguishable in Minkowski space due to the pseudo-metric's signature (1,3) (or (3,1) for the east-coast convention) arising from the necessity of establishing a causality structure of spacetime, and times are qualitatively different than spatial distances. So there's no argument for measuring ##\vec{E}## in different units than ##\vec{B}## but some justification for measuring times in a different unit than dinstances. So I think the best choice of units is the modern rationalized Gaussian system, the Heaviside-Lorentz systems, which is used in high-energy particle and nuclear physics.
 
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  • #12
That would be nice - however, electromagnetism is started at a stage where students don't have the maths.
It makes for a headache when you have to tie everything together for the physicists though.
 
  • #13
Sure, and I had always the impression (no the least from my own struggles to understand electromagnetism in the 4th semester at the university within the theory course) that electromagnetism is taught too early in the theory curriculum. One should at least introduce the covariant description of relativistic spacetime in the mechanics lecture (usually the lecture "Theoretical Physics II", which covers analytical mechanics) and then start electromagnetism right away within this description. The trouble, however, is that you usually don't have vector calculus at hand, and usually that's done by going the old-fasioned way by starting with electro- and magnetostatics first and then at the end rushing through the real dynamics in terms of Maxwell's equations. It would be good to have non-relativistic hydrodynamics first to introduce non-relativistic vector calculus first without having conceptual problems, using non-relativistic approximations in a relativistic field theory, but unfortunately hydrodynamics is not part of the modern undergraduate curriculum anymore.
 
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  • #14
The trouble is that people who do not get to go to college still need to have some understanding of electricity and magnetism.
 
  • #15
Fine, but they (hopefully) won't be bothered with Purcell's book ;-)).
 
  • #16
jasonRF said:
I may be in the minority, but I think having a basic understanding of elementary electromagnetism would be very helpful. I had never learned any aspect of electromagnetism before Purcell and found it to be a little too much; students in the class who had better high-school backgrounds (some had learned electromagnetism from Halliday and Resnick in high school) found it much more digestible. I think Purcell is a great book, but am not convinced it is the best for a very first exposure to this beautiful subject.

jason
I learned three of maxwell's equations from halliday and resnick, but haven't finished all the chapters yet. I will proceed with caution.
 
  • #17
referring to the posts about units, I think, at my level, it doesn't really matter that much. I am currently in eleventh grade and will for sure revisit em in college, I can pick on those things once i get there and have a deeper knowledge of electromagnetism. For a second (first rigorous) exposure, a book as good as purcell should suffice for sure. Thanks for all the replies!
 
  • #18
I'm currently taking introductory calculus-based E&M, and I've been using Purcell as my main textbook. So far, it's the best textbook I've ever used. I'm not even really sure what it is about the book that I like so much. Of course you should understand special relativity as taught in a standard physics textbook (like University Physics by Young and Freedman), as well as the basics of vector calculus.

Use these notes: http://physics.weber.edu/schroeder/mrr/MRR.html
Purchase both Purcell's Electricity & Magnetism and Daniel Fleisch's A Student's Guide to Maxwell's Equations.
With those notes and two books, you should be fully equipped to attack E&M.
 
  • #19
Im planning to go through Morin and ap f each before Purcell (summer) , so I'll be solid enough in SR, I'm learning vector Calc in school so I'll have that under my belt as well. Thanks for input

Ooooh hey Schroeder, do you guys know anything about his thermal physics book, and whether or not it's suitable for ipho prep?
 
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  • #20
RubinLicht said:
Im planning to go through Morin and ap f each before Purcell (summer) , so I'll be solid enough in SR, I'm learning vector Calc in school so I'll have that under my belt as well. Thanks for input
Just so you know, Morin is an upper-division mechanics book. You don't really need to go through Morin before reading Purcell.
 
  • #21
Amrator said:
Just so you know, Morin is an upper-division mechanics book. You don't really need to go through Morin before reading Purcell.
Yea I know, it's Hella fun tho, I have most of the math I need, and I'm doing it for ipho prep, not for purcell prep(though it'll help of course)
 
  • #22
RubinLicht said:
Yea I know, it's Hella fun tho, I have most of the math I need, and I'm doing it for ipho prep, not for purcell prep(though it'll help of course)
If you have enough of the math for Morin, then there is no reason you should be even slightly concerned about Purcell. Purcell is usually read before intermediate mechanics books like Morin or Taylor. Purcell is technically a lower-division book.
 
  • #23
Amrator said:
If you have enough of the math for Morin, then there is no reason you should be concerned about Purcell. Purcell is usually read before intermediate mechanics books like Morin or Taylor. Purcell is technically a lower-division book.
Ah I see, also, do you know anything about the thermal physics book by Schroeder?
 
  • #24
RubinLicht said:
Ah I see, also, do you know anything about the thermal physics book by Schroeder?
Haven't taken thermo yet.
 
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