Introduction to Electrodynamics/Chapter 7/4

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Next: 7.3 Maxwell's Equations

Next: 7.5 Energy and Momentum in Electrodynamics

7.4 Potential Formulations of Electrodynamics

In section 7.4, we look at the potential fields for Maxwell's Equations, the equations that completely describe the electric and magnetic fields even for dynamic systems.

7.4.1 Scalar and Vector Potentials

Back in electrostatics, we had the curl of E = 0. This let us write the potential using a scalar field, where the gradient of that field was the electric field. Now that we have the curl of E equal to the change in B, we can't use that anymore.

But because we haven't yet found any magnetic monopoles, we still have the divergence of B equal to 0. So we can still use our A field for the magnetic vector field, with the simple rule that the B field is the curl of A.

When we stick this into Faraday's Law, we get that the curl of E is equal to minus the time derivative of the curl of A. We can re-write this as the curl of the E field plus the time derivative of A is equal to 0.

Now we have something with a curl of 0, and now we can pull out a scalar potential, which we'll call V, the electric potential, because when A isn't changing very fast, it works just like it did in electrostatics.

Unlike B, which is simply the curl of A, E is now negative the sum of the divergence of V and the time derivative of A. We can rewrite it with V on one side, to suggest that a changing A is really like an E, which is what we found out earlier.

We're done with the equations 2 and 3 of Maxwell's Equations. Let's plug these values into Gauss's Law and Ampere's Law with Maxwell's Term and see what we get.

When we plugged in the electrostatic E = - grad V into Gauss's Law, we got back Poisson's Equation. Now, we have this extra d by dt A term, which, when we apply the divergence, is d by dt div A. This is all equal to minus 1 over eps0 rho, the volume charge density.

When we stick these potential fields into Ampere's Law with Maxwell's Term, we get back this fairly complicated formula. On the left side we have the double-curl of A, and on the right we have the volume current density J, and the time derivative of E, which is V and the time derivative of A. Plugging it in, we get three terms on the right, J, gradient of the change in V over time, and the second derivative, the acceleration, of A over time.

When we use the identity of the double curl is equal to the gradient of the divergence minus the vector Laplacian of the field, we can rewrite the terms this way. There's a bit of a pattern here, which we'll look into with more detail later.

So let's review the important equations we've discovered. First, the curl of A is still B, since there is no magnetic monopoles. Next, we have V expressed in terms of E and the time derivative of A. When we plugged these into Gauss's Law, we found that the charge density is related to the Laplacian of V and the change over time of the divergence of A. We also found that we could rewrite Ampere's Law with Maxwell's Correction in this complicated form.


Example 14

In Example 14, we're given the two potentials V=0 and A = this mess. Note that c is the 1 over the square root of epsilon0 mu0. Yes, this is the speed of light, and yes, as we'll see more in chapter 8, it must be that way. alpha is just a constant.

So when you've moved beyond ct from the origin along x , you're going to have an A of 0, but within that range, it's this. The term on the left increases over time linearly---kind of like a train moving at the speed of light. The term on the right is how far away you are from the origin along the x axis.

With V 0, the electric potential equation gives us that the electric field opposes the rate of change in A. That's rather easy to calculate...

The B field is simply the curl of A

And the E field depends on A.

We have our equations. Calculating the curls and divergences and time differentials is rather easy.

You can see now that we have everything we could ever want to know about any of the four Maxwell's equations. (Do it)

You'll note that you can even calculate the current. Note that there is a discontinuity at x=0. That implies you have a surface current. Remember that the curl of the normal and the current give you the discontinuity in B, so we calculate the surface current to be XYZ moving in this direction.

That's simply a current that gradually rises over time, creating this weird magnetic and electric field.

7.4.2 Gauge Transformations

7.4.3 Coulomb Gauge and Lorentz Gauge

7.4.4 Lorentz Force Law in Potential Form

Next: 7.5 Energy and Momentum in Electrodynamics