<p>This book is intended as an undergraduate textbook in electrodynamics at basic or advanced level. The objective is to attain a general understanding of the electrodynamic theory and its basic experiments and phenomena in order to form a foundation for further studies in the engineering sciences a
Electrodynamics: The Field-Free Approach: Electrostatics, Magnetism, Induction, Relativity and Field Theory
β Scribed by Kjell Prytz (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 377
- Series
- Undergraduate Lecture Notes in Physics
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book is intended as an undergraduate textbook in electrodynamics at basic or advanced level. The objective is to attain a general understanding of the electrodynamic theory and its basic experiments and phenomena in order to form a foundation for further studies in the engineering sciences as well as in modern quantum physics.
The outline of the book is obtained from the following principles:
β’ Base the theory on the concept of force and mutual interaction
β’ Connect the theory to experiments and observations accessible to the student
β’ Treat the electric, magnetic and inductive phenomena cohesively with respect to force, energy, dipoles and material
β’ Present electrodynamics using the same principles as in the preceding mechanics course
β’ Aim at explaining that theory of relativity is based on the magnetic effect
β’ Introduce field theory after the basic phenomena have been explored in terms of force
Although electrodynamics is described in this book from its 1st principles, prior knowledge of about one semester of university studies in mathematics and physics is required, including vector algebra, integral and differential calculus as well as a course in mechanics, treating Newtonβs laws and the energy principle.
The target groups are physics and engineering students, as well as professionals in the field, such as high school teachers and employees in the telecom industry. Chemistry and computer science students may also benefit from the book.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xxv
Basic Principles....Pages 1-3
Electrodynamic Force....Pages 5-31
Electrodynamic Energy....Pages 33-46
Macroscopic Systems of Unbound Charges....Pages 47-77
Conductors and Resistive Effects....Pages 79-91
Electric Circuits....Pages 93-103
Electric and Magnetic Dipoles....Pages 105-128
Material Properties....Pages 129-172
Motional Consequences....Pages 173-193
Field Theory....Pages 195-217
Antenna TheoryβThe Loop and the Dipole....Pages 219-238
Back Matter....Pages 239-361
β¦ Subjects
Optics and Electrodynamics; Microwaves, RF and Optical Engineering; Magnetism, Magnetic Materials; Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory; Optics, Optoelectronics, Plasmonics and Optical Devices
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
After an introductory chapter concerned with the history of force-free magnetic fields, and the relation of such fields to hydrodynamics and astrophysics, the book examines the limits imposed by the virial theorem for finite force-free configurations. Various techniques are then used to find sol
This novel approach is presented for the first time in book form. The author demonstrates that fundamental concepts and methods from phenomenological particle physics can be derived rigorously from well-defined general assumptions in a mathematically clean way.
<p>This book demonstrates that fundamental concepts and methods from phenomenological particle physics can be derived rigorously from well-defined general assumptions in a mathematically clean way. Starting with the Wightman formulation of relativistic quantum field theory, the perturbative formulat