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Maxwell's Equations, Condensed Notes, Chapter 6, JD Jackson

This document provides notes and formulas related to electromagnetism and Maxwell's equations. It includes: 1) Maxwell's equations in both Gaussian and SI units, including the source dependent and independent forms. 2) Equations for electric displacement, magnetic field, electric field potentials, and vector potential. 3) The Lorentz force law, continuity equation, and gauge transformations. 4) Wave equations for scalar and vector potentials and their solutions using Green's functions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views7 pages

Maxwell's Equations, Condensed Notes, Chapter 6, JD Jackson

This document provides notes and formulas related to electromagnetism and Maxwell's equations. It includes: 1) Maxwell's equations in both Gaussian and SI units, including the source dependent and independent forms. 2) Equations for electric displacement, magnetic field, electric field potentials, and vector potential. 3) The Lorentz force law, continuity equation, and gauge transformations. 4) Wave equations for scalar and vector potentials and their solutions using Green's functions.

Uploaded by

Scribd_rkc
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 7

Electrodynamics- Condensed Notes

and Useful Formulas


Raghav Kumar Chhetri
Department of Physics and Astronomy
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27516
Summer 2008

1
2
3
4
5

1
6 Maxwell’s Equations, Microscopic Electromag-
netism, Conservation Laws
Maxwell’s Equations in Gaussian Units

Source Dependent Equations:


~ ·D
∇ ~ = 4πρ (6.1)

~ ~
~ ⊗H
∇ ~ = 4π J + 1 ∂ D (6.2)
c c ∂t
Source Independent Equations:
~
∇ ~ = − 1 ∂B
~ ⊗E (6.3)
c ∂t
~ ·B
∇ ~ =0 (6.4)
~ and Magnetic field H
Electric Displacement D ~ in Free Space:

~ =E
D ~ + 4π P~ (6.5)

~ =B
H ~ − 4π M
~ (6.6)
~ and Magnetic field H
Electric Displacement D ~ in Permeable Media:

~ = E
D ~ + 4π P~ (6.7)

~
~ = B − 4π M
H ~ (6.8)
µ
Maxwell’s Equations in SI Units

Source Dependent Equations:


~ ·D
∇ ~ = 4πρ (6.9)

~ ~
~ ⊗H
∇ ~ = 4π J + 1 ∂ D (6.10)
c c ∂t
Source Independent Equations:
~
∇ ~ = − 1 ∂B
~ ⊗E (6.11)
c ∂t
~ ·B
∇ ~ =0 (6.12)
~ and Magnetic field H
Electric Displacement D ~ in Free Space:

~ = 0 E
D ~ + P~ (6.13)
~
~ = B −M
H ~ (6.14)
µ0
~ and Magnetic field H
Electric Displacement D ~ in Permeable Media:
~ = E
D ~ + P~ (6.15)
~
~ = B −M
H ~ (6.16)
µ
Continuity Equation (same in both units)
∂ρ
∇ · J~ + =0 (6.17)
∂t
Lorentz Force Law
∂~v ~ + q ~v ⊗ B
~
m = qE (6.18)
∂t c
F ~ + n ~v ⊗ B
~ = nq E ~ (6.19)
c
~ = ρE
F ~ + 1 J~ ⊗ B~ (6.20)
c
where,
n is the number of charge carriers per unit volume
F~ is the force per unit volume i.e. force density

~ and Φ
Potentials, A

From equation (6.4) we can immediately see that B ~ can be written as the Curl
of some vector potential (since, we know that the Divergence of a Curl is zero)

~ =∇⊗A
B ~ (6.21)
Substitute this equation into the source-independent equation (6.3) to get:
" #
1 ∂ ~
A
∇⊗ E ~+ =0 (6.22)
c ∂t

We know that the Curl of a Gradient is zero so the square bracketed term can
be written as a gradient of some scalar field i.e.
~
~ + 1 ∂ A = −∇Φ
E (6.23)
c ∂t
~
~ = −∇Φ − 1 ∂ A
E (6.24)
c ∂t
~ and E
Thus, in equations (6.21) and (6.24), we have written B ~ in terms of
~
vector potential A and scalar potential Φ.
Gauge Transformation:
A~0 = A~ + ∇ψ
~ (6.25)
1 ∂ψ
Φ0 = Φ − (6.26)
c ∂t
~ 0 and Φ0 give the same electrid field E
A ~ and magnetic induction B
~ as A
~ and Φ
do. ψ is called the Gauge Field.
Lorentz Gauge:
~ ·A
∇ ~ = − 1 ∂Φ (6.27)
c ∂t
This is a constraint equation on A~ and Φ.

Wave Equations
1 ∂2
 
∇2 − 2 2 Φ = −4πρ (6.28)
c ∂t
1 ∂2 ~
 

∇2 − 2 2 A = − J~ (6.29)
c ∂t c
Remember, back in Chapter 1, the solution to Poisson equation ∇2 Φ = −4πρ
(In SI Units, the right hand side becomes, ρ/0 ) is:

ρ(x0 ) d3 x0
Z
Φ(~x) = (6.30)
|~x − ~x0 |

where,
~x is the observation point and ~x0 is the source point.

Similarly, the solution to [..]Ψ = −4πf is:


Z
Ψ(~x, t) = f (x0 , t0 ) G(~x, t; ~x0 , t0 ) d4 x0 (6.31)

[..] is the bracketed term in equations (6.28) and (6.29), ρ represents the scalar
potential Φ or the vector potential A~ and f represents the charge density ρ or
~
the current density J over c on the right hand side of the mentioned equations.

Under Fourier Transformation, [..] becomes ∇2 + k 2 (since ∂/∂t → −iω and


ω = kc).  2
∇ + k 2 Ψ = −4πf (~x, ω)

(6.32)
This equation is called the Helmholtz equation. The solution to this equation
using green’s function is the following:
Z
Ψ(~x, ω) = f (~x0 , ω) Gk (~x, ~x0 ) d3 x0 (6.33)

Again, back in Chapter 1, we had the following relation:


1
∇2 = −4π δ(~x − ~x0 ) (6.34)
|~x − ~x0 |
Similarly, here we have:

[..] G(~x, t; ~x0 , t0 ) = −4πδ 3 (~x − ~x0 ) δ(t − t0 ) (6.35)

∇ + k 2 Gk (~x, ~x0 ) = −4πδ 3 (~x − ~x0 )


 2 
(6.36)

Retarded Gk + (R) and Advanced Gk − (R) Green’s Functions:

eikR
Gk + (R) = (6.37)
R
e−ikR
Gk − (R) = (6.38)
R
AGk + (R) + BGk − (R) = Gk (R), A+B =1 (6.39)
Now, 0
G± (R, ω) = Gk ± (R)eiωt (6.40)
Using Inverse Fourier Transformation, we get:
Z ∞
± 1
G (R, τ ) = e−iωt G± (R, ω)dω (6.41)
2π −∞

1
G± (R, τ ) =δ(τ ∓ R/c) (6.42)
R
This equation represents the 4D Green’s function.

Retarded 4D Green’s Function:


1 |~x − ~x0 |
G+ (R, τ ) = δ(t − t0 − ) (6.43)
R c
where,
t0 is the time in the past
t is the present time (now)

Advanced 4D Green’s Function:


1 |~x − ~x0 |
G− (R, τ ) = δ(t − t0 + ) (6.44)
R c
where,
t0 is the time in the future
t is the present time (now)

Poynting Vector, Conservation of Energy, Momentum

For a single charge q, the rate of doing work by an external electromagnetic


~ does the work and B
fields (only E ~ doesn’t) is q E
~ · ~v (Power = Force · velocity)
Now, for a continuous distribution of charge and current, the total rate of doing
work by the EM fields in a finite volume is:
 Z 
1 ~ = 1 J~ · E
~ =
nq~v · E J~ · E
~ d3 x
n n V
Z
dEmech
= J~ · E
~ d3 x (6.45)
dt V
This power represents the conversion of Electromagnetic energy into thermal or
mechanical energy.
We know: Z
Emech = umech d3 x (6.46)
V
where,
umech is the Mechanical Energy Density

From equations (6.46) and (6.47),we immediately see that Mechanical Power
Density, dumech /dt is:
dumech
= J~ · E
~ (6.47)
dt
Now,
Electromagnetic Energy Density, uem :
1 h~ ~ ~ ·H
~
i
uem ≡ E·D+B (6.48)

Total Electromagnetic Energy or Field Energy(Total in the sense that it’s Elec-
trostatic and Magnetic): Z
Eem = uem d3 x (6.49)
V
Z
1  2
E + B 2 d3 x

Eem = (6.50)
8π V

~
Poynting Vector, S(Energy/Area ·time i.e Rate of Energy Flow):

~≡ c E
S ~ ⊗H
~ (6.51)

Poynting Theorem:
∂uem ~ ~
+ ∇ · S = −J~ · E
~ (6.52)
∂t
Now, using equation (6.47), we get:

d ~ ·S
~=0
[uem + umech ] + ∇ (6.53)
dt
Notice how this equation is similar to the continuity equation (6.17).

Now, Intergrating through the entire volume, we get:


Z Z
d 3 ~ ·S~ d3 x
[uem + umech ] d x = − ∇ (6.54)
dt
Using Divergence Theorem on the right hand side and pulling the time derivative
outside the integral on the left hand side, we get:
Z Z I
d d ~ · d~σ
uem d3 x + umech d3 x = − S (6.55)
dt dt ∂V

Using equation (6.46) and (6.49), we get:


I
dEem dEmech ~ · d~σ
+ =− S (6.56)
dt dt ∂V

Thus, Poynting Theorem expresses the Conservation of Energy.

From equation (6.20), we have:


Z  
d~
pmech ~ + 1 J~ ⊗ B
~ d3 x
= ρE (6.57)
dt V c

Conservation of Linear Momentum:


I
d em d
p + pmech =− Tijem dσi (6.58)
dt i dt i ∂V

where,
p~em is the Electromagnetic Momentum
~g is called the Electromagnetic Momentum Density
Z Z Z
1 ~ ~ 3 1 ~
p~em = E⊗B d x= 2 S d x = ~g d3 x
3
(6.59)
4πc c

Tij is the element of tensor dyadic T̄ called the stress-energy tensor.


 
1 ~~ ~ ~ 1¯ 2 2

T̄ = EE + BB − I E + B (6.60)
4π 2
 
1 1
Tij ≡ p δij = Ei Ej + Bi Bj − (E 2 + B 2 )δij (6.61)
4π 2
where,
p in equation (6.61) represents pressure.
I¯ = ˆ1 ˆ1 + ˆ2 ˆ2 + ˆ3 ˆ3
ˆ1 , ˆ2 , ˆ3 are unit second rank tensors and I¯ is just like identity I for vectors.

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