๐Electromagnetism II Unit 1 โ Maxwell's equations
Maxwell's equations form the cornerstone of classical electromagnetism, unifying electric and magnetic phenomena. These four equations describe how electric charges and currents create electromagnetic fields, and how these fields interact with each other and matter.
The equations predict the existence of electromagnetic waves, explaining the nature of light and laying the foundation for modern technologies like radio and wireless communication. They represent a triumph of 19th-century physics, synthesizing decades of experimental and theoretical work into a elegant and powerful framework.
Maxwell's equations fundamental set of partial differential equations that describe classical electromagnetism
Gauss's law relates electric field to electric charge density (divergence of electric field proportional to charge density)
Gauss's law for magnetism states magnetic monopoles do not exist (divergence of magnetic field is always zero)
Magnetic field lines always form closed loops
Faraday's law of induction describes how changing magnetic fields induce electric fields (curl of electric field equals negative time derivative of magnetic field)
Basis for electromagnetic induction and transformers
Ampรจre's circuital law with Maxwell's correction relates magnetic fields to electric currents and changing electric fields (curl of magnetic field proportional to current density and time derivative of electric field)
Displacement current term added by Maxwell explains electromagnetic wave propagation
Constitutive relations connect electric and magnetic fields to electric displacement and magnetic induction (permittivity and permeability)
Historical Context and Development
James Clerk Maxwell developed equations in the 1860s, building upon work of Gauss, Faraday, Ampรจre, and others
Unified previously separate theories of electricity and magnetism into a coherent framework
Maxwell's equations originally formulated in quaternion notation, later simplified by Heaviside and Gibbs using vector calculus
Predicted existence of electromagnetic waves propagating at the speed of light
Suggested light itself is an electromagnetic wave
Hertz experimentally confirmed existence of electromagnetic waves in 1887, leading to development of radio technology
Lorentz and others further refined Maxwell's equations, incorporating special relativity and invariance under Lorentz transformations