What causes natural electromagnetic fields?

AI Thread Summary
Natural electromagnetic fields are primarily generated by lightning discharges in the Earth-ionosphere cavity, with two main components: one from global thunder activity and another from local thunderstorms. The global component produces a stable signal with a homogeneous spectral density between 8 and 500 Hz, while the local component generates intermittent pulses with a spectrum peaking at 2000 to 20000 Hz. These fields are influenced by environmental factors such as time of day and geographical location, affecting their intensity and stability. The discussion also clarifies that photons act as force carriers for electromagnetic fields, mediating interactions between matter particles in quantum field theory. Understanding these electromagnetic fields is essential for applications like geological surveying.
stochastic
Messages
61
Reaction score
0
What event creates and sustains natural electromagnetic fields? And what do they mean when they say a photon mediates the electromagnetic field?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Well, I just learned in my EM class that what sustains the EM wave is fact that changing electric and magnetic fields continually produce one another; that is; an electric field that changes produces a changing magnetic field, and vice versa.
 
Natural electromagnetic fields are electromagnetic fields originating mainly from lightning discharges in the Earth-ionosphere cavity. At some distance from their source, these fields propagate as a plane wave with respect to the horizontally directed vector of the magnetic field. There are two components of the field each having different properties.

The first component of natural electromagnetic fields is caused by global thunder activity. The signal produced by electromagnetic fields of this source are relatively stable. A record of this signal received in a manner that is known using a coil as a sensor appears to be random noise. It has almost a homogeneous spectral density in the range between 8 and 500 Hz. Horizontal components of this signal have spectral density of 0.05-0.15 nV/(Hz .sup.1/2.times.m.sup.2). The signal can change gradually several times a day depending on such factors as time of day, time of year and geographical location depending on changes in the conditions of the conductive layers in the ionosphere. Generally the worst time for measurements is winter midday because of the relatively low ambient electromagnetic fields.
The second component of natural electromagnetic fields is caused by local thunderstorms generally happening within a radius 700-1000 km. This signal is more intermittent and appears on a known sensor as separate pulses of oscillations of 1-5 ms each. The spectrum of the field is most intensive in the 2000 to 20000 Hz range. Its intensity can change significantly in a matter of hours.

System, method and computer product geological surveying utilizing natural electromagnetic fields; United States Patent 20030094952
http://www.freepatentsonline.com/20030094952.htm


As for the latter part of your question, I believe that it simply means that mediates the fundamental force between matter particles. Photon - EM waves, graviton - gravitational force. Mayby someone else can give a more thorough intro to this.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
stochastic said:
And what do they mean when they say a photon mediates the electromagnetic field?

That means a photon is a force carrier for electromagnetic fields, also known as a virtual particle or virtual photon.

Similarly a graviton would be a force carrier for a gravitational field, a gluon for strong nuclear force, all were never detected. But for weak nuclear force a mediator W Bosons were detected.
 
When you quantize the electromagnetic field, the resulting particle is the photon. At first you deal with electromagnetism as a classical field theory, where the electric and magnetic fields obey Maxwell's equations. You can derive Maxwell's equations from a standard Langrangian or Hamiltonian. We can quantize this system, in very roughly the same manner we'd quantize eg the harmonic oscillator or square well, and the resulting theory has photons in it.

The language "mediated" comes from quantum field theory. In most cases, we can view electromagnetic interactions between particles as caused by the exchange of virtual photons.
 
This is from Griffiths' Electrodynamics, 3rd edition, page 352. I am trying to calculate the divergence of the Maxwell stress tensor. The tensor is given as ##T_{ij} =\epsilon_0 (E_iE_j-\frac 1 2 \delta_{ij} E^2)+\frac 1 {\mu_0}(B_iB_j-\frac 1 2 \delta_{ij} B^2)##. To make things easier, I just want to focus on the part with the electrical field, i.e. I want to find the divergence of ##E_{ij}=E_iE_j-\frac 1 2 \delta_{ij}E^2##. In matrix form, this tensor should look like this...
Thread 'Applying the Gauss (1835) formula for force between 2 parallel DC currents'
Please can anyone either:- (1) point me to a derivation of the perpendicular force (Fy) between two very long parallel wires carrying steady currents utilising the formula of Gauss for the force F along the line r between 2 charges? Or alternatively (2) point out where I have gone wrong in my method? I am having problems with calculating the direction and magnitude of the force as expected from modern (Biot-Savart-Maxwell-Lorentz) formula. Here is my method and results so far:- This...

Similar threads

Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
10
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
14
Views
2K
Replies
25
Views
21K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Back
Top