Description

Book Synopsis
Thorough, evenly paced, and intuitive, this friendly introduction to high-level covariant electrodynamics is a handy and helpful addition to any physicist's toolkit.

Trade Review
"John Charap succeeds well in making electrodynamics manifestly covariant, providing historical background and applications of far-reaching importance. The diligent reader, armed with pen and ample scratch paper for filling in the intermediate steps, will see covariant electrodynamics emerge coherently." (Dwight E. Neuenschwander, author of Emmy Noether's Wonderful Theorem)"

Table of Contents

Preface
1. Introduction
2. Mathematical Preliminaries
2.1. A Reminder of Vector Calculus
2.2. Special Relativity
2.3. Four-Vectors
2.4. Covariant and Contravariant Vectors
2.5. Tensors
2.6. Time Dilation and the Lorentz-FitzGerald Contraction
2.7. The Four-Velocity
2.8. Energy and Momentum
2.9. Plane Waves
2.10. Exercises for Chapter 2
3. Maxwell's Equations
3.1. Our Starting Point
3.2. The Experimental Background
3.2.1. Coulomb's Law
3.2.2. Absence of Magnetic Monopoles
3.2.3. Ørsted and Ampere
3.2.4. The Law of Biot and Savart
3.2.5. The Displacement Current
3.2.6. Faraday's Law of Induction
3.2.7. The Lorentz Force
3.3. Capacitors and Solenoids
3.3.1. Energy
3.4. Electromagnetic Waves
3.4.1. Polarization
3.4.2. Electromagnetism and Light
3.5. Exercises for Chapter 3
4. Behavior under Lorentz Transformations
4.1. The Charge-Current Density Four-Vector
4.2. The Lorentz Force
4.3. The Potential Four-Vector
4.4. Gauge Transformations
4.5. The Field-Strength Tensor
4.6. The Dual Field-Strength Tensor
4.7. Exercises for Chapter 4
5. Lagrangian and Hamiltonian
5.1. Lagrange's Equations
5.2. The Lagrangian for a Charged Particle
5.3. The Hamiltonian for a Charged Particle
5.4. The Lagrangian for the Electromagnetic Field
5.5. The Hamiltonian for the Electromagnetic Field
5.6. Noether's Theorem
5.7. Exercises for Chapter 5
6. Stress, Energy, and Momentum
6.1. The Canonical Stress Tensor
6.2. The Symmetrical Stress Tensor
6.3. The Conservation Laws with Sources
6.4. The Field as an Ensemble of Oscillators
6.5. Exercises for Chapter 6
7. Motion of a Charged Particle
7.1. Fields from an Unaccelerated Particle
7.2. Motion of a Particle in an External Field
7.2.1. Uniform Static Magnetic Field
7.2.2. Crossed E and B Fields
7.2.3. Nonuniform Static B-Field
7.2.4. Curved Magnetic Field Lines
7.3. Exercises for Chapter 7
8. Fields from Sources
8.1. Introducing the Green's Function
8.2. The Delta Function
8.3. The Green's Function
8.4. The Covariant Form for the Green's Function
8.5. Exercises for Chapter 8
9. Radiation
9.1. Potentials from a Moving Charged Particle
9.2. The Lienard-Wiechert Potentials
9.2.1. Fields from an Unaccelerated Particle
9.2.2. Fields from a Charged Oscillator
9.3. The General Case
9.4. The Multipole Expansion
9.4.1. Electric Dipole Radiation
9.4.2. Magnetic Dipole and Higher-Order Terms
9.5. Motion in a Circle
9.6. Radiation from Linear Accelerators
9.7. Radiation from an Antenna
9.8. Exercises for Chapter 9
10. Media
10.1. Dispersion
10.1.1. Newton on the "Phænomena of Colours"
10.2. Refraction
10.2.1. The Boundary Conditions at the Interface
10.3. Cerenkov Radiation
10.4. Exercises for Chapter 10
11. Scattering
11.1. Scattering from a Small Scatterer
11.2. Many Scatterers
11.3. Scattering from the Sky
11.3.1. The Born Approximation
11.3.2. Rayleigh's Explanation for the Blue Sky
11.4. Critical Opalescence
12. Dispersion
12.1. The Oscillator Model
12.1.1. The High-Frequency Limit
12.1.2. The Drude Model
12.2. Dispersion Relations
12.3. The Optical Theorem
Epilogue
Index

Covariant Electrodynamics

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A Paperback / softback by John M. Charap

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    View other formats and editions of Covariant Electrodynamics by John M. Charap

    Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
    Publication Date: 27/07/2011
    ISBN13: 9781421400150, 978-1421400150
    ISBN10: 1421400154

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Thorough, evenly paced, and intuitive, this friendly introduction to high-level covariant electrodynamics is a handy and helpful addition to any physicist's toolkit.

    Trade Review
    "John Charap succeeds well in making electrodynamics manifestly covariant, providing historical background and applications of far-reaching importance. The diligent reader, armed with pen and ample scratch paper for filling in the intermediate steps, will see covariant electrodynamics emerge coherently." (Dwight E. Neuenschwander, author of Emmy Noether's Wonderful Theorem)"

    Table of Contents

    Preface
    1. Introduction
    2. Mathematical Preliminaries
    2.1. A Reminder of Vector Calculus
    2.2. Special Relativity
    2.3. Four-Vectors
    2.4. Covariant and Contravariant Vectors
    2.5. Tensors
    2.6. Time Dilation and the Lorentz-FitzGerald Contraction
    2.7. The Four-Velocity
    2.8. Energy and Momentum
    2.9. Plane Waves
    2.10. Exercises for Chapter 2
    3. Maxwell's Equations
    3.1. Our Starting Point
    3.2. The Experimental Background
    3.2.1. Coulomb's Law
    3.2.2. Absence of Magnetic Monopoles
    3.2.3. Ørsted and Ampere
    3.2.4. The Law of Biot and Savart
    3.2.5. The Displacement Current
    3.2.6. Faraday's Law of Induction
    3.2.7. The Lorentz Force
    3.3. Capacitors and Solenoids
    3.3.1. Energy
    3.4. Electromagnetic Waves
    3.4.1. Polarization
    3.4.2. Electromagnetism and Light
    3.5. Exercises for Chapter 3
    4. Behavior under Lorentz Transformations
    4.1. The Charge-Current Density Four-Vector
    4.2. The Lorentz Force
    4.3. The Potential Four-Vector
    4.4. Gauge Transformations
    4.5. The Field-Strength Tensor
    4.6. The Dual Field-Strength Tensor
    4.7. Exercises for Chapter 4
    5. Lagrangian and Hamiltonian
    5.1. Lagrange's Equations
    5.2. The Lagrangian for a Charged Particle
    5.3. The Hamiltonian for a Charged Particle
    5.4. The Lagrangian for the Electromagnetic Field
    5.5. The Hamiltonian for the Electromagnetic Field
    5.6. Noether's Theorem
    5.7. Exercises for Chapter 5
    6. Stress, Energy, and Momentum
    6.1. The Canonical Stress Tensor
    6.2. The Symmetrical Stress Tensor
    6.3. The Conservation Laws with Sources
    6.4. The Field as an Ensemble of Oscillators
    6.5. Exercises for Chapter 6
    7. Motion of a Charged Particle
    7.1. Fields from an Unaccelerated Particle
    7.2. Motion of a Particle in an External Field
    7.2.1. Uniform Static Magnetic Field
    7.2.2. Crossed E and B Fields
    7.2.3. Nonuniform Static B-Field
    7.2.4. Curved Magnetic Field Lines
    7.3. Exercises for Chapter 7
    8. Fields from Sources
    8.1. Introducing the Green's Function
    8.2. The Delta Function
    8.3. The Green's Function
    8.4. The Covariant Form for the Green's Function
    8.5. Exercises for Chapter 8
    9. Radiation
    9.1. Potentials from a Moving Charged Particle
    9.2. The Lienard-Wiechert Potentials
    9.2.1. Fields from an Unaccelerated Particle
    9.2.2. Fields from a Charged Oscillator
    9.3. The General Case
    9.4. The Multipole Expansion
    9.4.1. Electric Dipole Radiation
    9.4.2. Magnetic Dipole and Higher-Order Terms
    9.5. Motion in a Circle
    9.6. Radiation from Linear Accelerators
    9.7. Radiation from an Antenna
    9.8. Exercises for Chapter 9
    10. Media
    10.1. Dispersion
    10.1.1. Newton on the "Phænomena of Colours"
    10.2. Refraction
    10.2.1. The Boundary Conditions at the Interface
    10.3. Cerenkov Radiation
    10.4. Exercises for Chapter 10
    11. Scattering
    11.1. Scattering from a Small Scatterer
    11.2. Many Scatterers
    11.3. Scattering from the Sky
    11.3.1. The Born Approximation
    11.3.2. Rayleigh's Explanation for the Blue Sky
    11.4. Critical Opalescence
    12. Dispersion
    12.1. The Oscillator Model
    12.1.1. The High-Frequency Limit
    12.1.2. The Drude Model
    12.2. Dispersion Relations
    12.3. The Optical Theorem
    Epilogue
    Index

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