Electrodynamics

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Visualized magnetic field of a solenoid

The classical electrodynamics (also electrical theory ) is the branch of physics that deals with moving electric charges and time-varying electric and magnetic fields busy. The electrostatics as a special case of electrodynamics deals with dormant electrical charges and their fields. The underlying basic force in physics is called electromagnetic interaction .

Hans Christian Ørsted (1820) is considered to be the discoverer of the connection between electricity and magnetism , although Gian Domenico Romagnosi (1802) was his forerunner, which was hardly noticed at the time. The theory of classical electrodynamics was formulated by James Clerk Maxwell in the mid-19th century using the Maxwell equations named after him . The investigation of Maxwell's equations for moving reference systems led Albert Einstein in 1905 to formulate the special theory of relativity . During the 1940s, quantum mechanics and electrodynamics succeeded in quantum electrodynamicsto combine; their predictions agree very precisely with the measurement results.

Electromagnetic waves are an important form of electromagnetic fields , the most famous of which is visible light . Research into this forms a separate area of ​​physics, optics . The physical basis for the description of electromagnetic waves, however, is provided by electrodynamics.

Classical electrodynamics

Basic equations

The interaction of electromagnetic fields and electrical charges is fundamentally determined by the microscopic Maxwell equations

and the Lorentz force

certainly.

The macroscopic Maxwell equations result from this with the help of the material equations of electrodynamics . These are equations for the effective fields that appear in matter .

Also play an important role (derived from this):

  1. the continuity equation , which says that the charge is retained,
  2. the Poynting's theorem , which states that the energy of particles and fields is maintained overall.

Potentials and wave equation

The homogeneous Maxwell equations

and

can by introducing the electromagnetic potentials according to

and

can be solved identically in a star-shaped area ( Poincaré lemma ). The so-called scalar potential and the vector potential denote . Since the physical fields are only given by deriving the potentials, one has certain freedom to change the potentials and still get the same physical fields back. For example, and result in the same field if you look through them

relates to each other. If one also demands that the same field results from such a transformation , it must be like

transform. Such a transformation is called a gauge transformation. Two calibrations are often used in electrodynamics. First, the so-called Coulomb calibration or radiation calibration

and secondly, the Lorenz calibration

.

The Lorenz calibration has the advantage of being relativistically invariant and of not changing structurally when changing between two inertial systems. The Coulomb calibration is not relativistically invariant, but is more used in the canonical quantization of electrodynamics.

If the - and - fields and the vacuum material equations are inserted into the inhomogeneous Maxwell equations and the potentials are calibrated according to the Lorenz calibration, the inhomogeneous Maxwell equations decouple and the potentials satisfy inhomogeneous wave equations

Here denotes the D'Alembert operator .

Special cases

The electrostatics is the special case motionless electrical charges and static (not changing over time) electric fields. It can also be used within limits as long as the speeds and accelerations of the charges and the changes in the fields are small.

The Magnetostatics deals with the special case of constant currents in a total of uncharged conductors and constant magnetic fields. It can be used for currents and magnetic fields that change slowly enough.

The combination of the two, electromagnetism, can be described as the electrodynamics of the charges that are not accelerated too much. Most of the processes in electrical circuits (e.g. coil , capacitor , transformer ) can already be described at this level. A stationary electric or magnetic field remains close to its source, such as the earth's magnetic field . However, a changing electromagnetic field can move away from its origin. The field forms an electromagnetic wave in the interplay between magnetic and electric fields. This emission of electromagnetic waves is neglected in electrostatics. The description of the electromagnetic field is limited here to the near field.

Electromagnetic waves, on the other hand, are the only form of electromagnetic field that can exist independently of a source. Although they are created by sources, they can continue to exist after they have been created regardless of the source. Since light can be described as an electromagnetic wave, optics is ultimately a special case of electrodynamics.

Electrodynamics and Theory of Relativity

In contrast to classical mechanics, electrodynamics is not Galileo-invariant . This means that if one assumes an absolute, Euclidean space and an independent absolute time , as in classical mechanics , then the Maxwell equations do not apply in every inertial system .

Simple example: A charged particle flying at constant speed is surrounded by an electric and a magnetic field. A second, equally charged particle, flying at the same speed, experiences a repulsive force from the electric field of the first particle , since charges of the same name repel each other; At the same time, it experiences an attractive Lorentz force from its magnetic field , which partially compensates for the repulsion. At the speed of light this compensation would be complete. In the inertial system in which both particles rest, there is no magnetic field and therefore no Lorentz force. Only the repulsive Coulomb force acts there , so that the particle is accelerated more strongly than in the original reference system in which both charges move. This contradicts Newtonian physics, in which the acceleration does not depend on the reference system.

This knowledge initially led to the assumption that there is a preferred reference system in electrodynamics (ether system). Attempts to measure the speed of the earth against the ether , however, failed, for example the Michelson-Morley experiment . Hendrik Antoon Lorentz solved this problem with a modified ether theory ( Lorentz's ether theory ), which, however, was replaced by Albert Einstein with his special theory of relativity . Einstein replaced Newton's absolute space and time with a four-dimensional space - time . In the theory of relativity, the Galileo invariance is replaced by the Lorentz invariance , which is fulfilled by electrodynamics.

In fact, the reduction in acceleration and thus the magnetic force in the above example can be explained as a consequence of the length contraction and time dilation if the observations made in the moving system are transformed back into a system at rest. In a certain way, therefore, the existence of magnetic phenomena can ultimately be traced back to the structure of space and time, as described in the theory of relativity. From this point of view, the structure of the basic equations for static magnetic fields with their cross products also appears less surprising.

In the manifest Lorentz form-invariant description of electrodynamics, the scalar potential and the vector potential form a four-vector , analogous to the four-vector of space and time, so that the Lorentz transformations can also be applied analogously to the electromagnetic potentials. In the case of a special Lorentz transformation with the velocity in the direction, the transformation equations apply to the fields in the common SI system of units :

(In cgs units, these equations are only slightly modified: Formally, you only have to substitute or with or .)

Extensions

However, classical electrodynamics does not provide a consistent description of moving point charges; problems such as radiation feedback arise on small scales . The quantum electrodynamics (QED) combines the electrodynamics therefore with quantum mechanical concepts. The theory of the electroweak interaction unites the QED with the weak interaction and is part of the standard model of elementary particle physics. The structure of the QED is also the starting point for quantum chromodynamics (QCD), which describes the strong interaction . However, the situation there is even more complicated (e.g. three types of charge, see color charge ).

A standardization of electrodynamics with the general theory of relativity ( gravitation ) is known under the name Kaluza-Klein theory and represents an early attempt to standardize the fundamental interactions .

See also

literature

Birth of classical electrodynamics

Current textbooks

Web links

Commons : electromagnetic field  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
Wiktionary: Electrodynamics  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations