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The theory of
special relativity plays an important role in the modern theory of
classical electromagnetism. First of all, it gives formulas for how electromagnetic objects, in particular the
electric and
magnetic fields, are altered under a
Lorentz transformation from one
inertial frame
of reference to another. Secondly, it sheds light on the relationship
between electricity and magnetism, showing that frame of reference
determines if an observation follows electrostatic or magnetic laws.
Third, it motivates a compact and convenient notation for the laws of
electromagnetism, namely the "manifestly covariant" tensor form.
Maxwell's equations, when they were first stated in their complete
form in 1865, would turn out to be compatible with special relativity.
[1]
Moreover, the apparent coincidences in which the same effect was
observed due to different physical phenomena by two different observers
would be shown to be not coincidental in the least by special
relativity. In fact, half of Einstein's 1905 first paper on special
relativity, "
On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies," explains how to transform Maxwell's equations.
Transformation of the fields between inertial frames
The E and B fields
Lorentz boost of an electric charge.
Top: The charge is at rest in frame F, so this observer sees a
static electric field. An observer in another frame F′ moves with
velocity v relative to F, and sees the charge move with velocity −v with an altered electric field E due to length contraction and a magnetic field B due to the motion of the charge.
Bottom: Similar setup, with the charge at rest in frame F′.
This equation, also called the
Joules-Bernoulli equation, considers two
inertial frames. As notation, the field variables in one frame are
unprimed, and in a frame moving relative to the unprimed frame at velocity
v, the fields are denoted with
primes. In addition, the fields
parallel to the velocity
v are denoted by
while the fields perpendicular to
v are denoted as
. In these two frames moving at relative velocity
v, the
E-fields and
B-fields are related by:
[2]
where
is called the
Lorentz factor and
c is the
speed of light in
free space. The inverse transformations are the same except
v → −v.
An equivalent, alternative expression is:
[3]
where
is the velocity
unit vector. With previous notations, one actually has
and
.
If one of the fields is zero in one frame of reference, that doesn't
necessarily mean it is zero in all other frames of reference. This can
be seen by, for instance, making the unprimed electric field zero in the
transformation to the primed electric field. In this case, depending on
the orientation of the magnetic field, the primed system could see an
electric field, even though there is none in the unprimed system.
This does not mean two completely different sets of events are seen
in the two frames, but that the same sequence of events is described in
two different ways (see
Moving magnet and conductor problem below).
If a particle of charge
q moves with velocity
u with respect to frame S, then the Lorentz force in frame S is:
In frame S', the Lorentz force is:
If S and S' have aligned axes then:
[4]
A derivation for the transformation of the Lorentz force for the particular case
u =
0 is given here.
[5] A more general one can be seen here.
[6]
Component by component, for relative motion along the x-axis, this works out to be the following:
The transformations in this form can be made more compact by introducing the
electromagnetic tensor (defined below), which is a
covariant tensor.
The D and H fields
For the
electric displacement D and
magnetic intensity H, using the
constitutive relations and the result for
c2:
gives
Analogously for
E and
B, the
D and
H form the
electromagnetic displacement tensor.
The φ and A fields
An alternative simpler transformation of the EM field uses the
electromagnetic potentials - the
electric potential φ and
magnetic potential A:
[7]
where
is the parallel component of
A to the direction of relative velocity between frames
v, and
is the perpendicular component. These transparently resemble the
characteristic form of other Lorentz transformations (like time-position
and energy-momentum), while the transformations of
E and
B above are slightly more complicated. The components can be collected together as:
The ρ and J fields
Analogously for the
charge density ρ and
current density J,
[7]
Collecting components together:
Non-relativistic approximations
For speeds
v ≪
c, the relativistic factor γ ≈ 1, which yields:
so that there is no need to distinguish between the spatial and temporal coordinates in
Maxwell's equations.
Relationship between electricity and magnetism
“ |
One part of the force between moving charges we call the magnetic force. It is really one aspect of an electrical effect. |
” |
— Richard Feynman[8] |
Deriving magnetism from electrostatics
The chosen reference frame determines if an electromagnetic
phenomenon is viewed as an effect of electrostatics or magnetism.
Authors usually derive magnetism from electrostatics when special
relativity and
charge invariance are taken into account.
The Feynman Lectures on Physics
(vol. 2, ch. 13-6) uses this method to derive the "magnetic" force on a
moving charge next to a current-carrying wire. See also Haskell
[9] and Landau.
[10]
Fields intermix in different frames
The
above transformation rules show that the electric field in one frame
contributes to the magnetic field in another frame, and vice versa.
[11]
This is often described by saying that the electric field and magnetic
field are two interrelated aspects of a single object, called the
electromagnetic field. Indeed, the entire electromagnetic field can be encoded in a single rank-2 tensor called the
electromagnetic tensor; see below.
Moving magnet and conductor problem
A famous example of the intermixing of electric and magnetic
phenomena in different frames of reference is called the "moving magnet
and conductor problem", cited by Einstein in his 1905 paper on Special
Relativity.
If a conductor moves with a constant velocity through the field of a stationary magnet,
eddy currents will be produced due to a
magnetic
force on the electrons in the conductor. In the rest frame of the
conductor, on the other hand, the magnet will be moving and the
conductor stationary. Classical electromagnetic theory predicts that
precisely the same microscopic eddy currents will be produced, but they
will be due to an
electric force.
[12]
Covariant formulation in vacuum
The laws and mathematical objects in classical electromagnetism can be written in a form which is
manifestly covariant.
Here, this is only done so for vacuum (or for the microscopic Maxwell
equations, not using macroscopic descriptions of materials such as
electric permittivity), and uses
SI units.
This section uses
Einstein notation, including
Einstein summation convention. See also
Ricci calculus for a summary of
tensor index notations, and
raising and lowering indices for definition of superscript and subscript indices, and how to switch between them. The
Minkowski metric tensor η here has
metric signature (+ − − −).
Field tensor and 4-current
The above relativistic transformations suggest the electric and
magnetic fields are coupled together, in a mathematical object with 6
components: an
antisymmetric second-rank
tensor, or a
bivector. This is called the
electromagnetic field tensor, usually written as
Fμν. In matrix form:
[13]
where
c the
speed of light - in
natural units c = 1.
There is another way of merging the electric and magnetic fields into an antisymmetric tensor, by replacing
E/
c →
B and
B → −
E/
c, to get the
dual tensor Gμν.
In the context of
special relativity, both of these transform according to the
Lorentz transformation according to
- ,
where Λ
αν is the
Lorentz transformation tensor for a change from one reference frame to another. The same tensor is used twice in the summation.
The charge and current density, the sources of the fields, also combine into the
four-vector
called the
four-current.
Maxwell's equations in tensor form
Using these tensors,
Maxwell's equations reduce to:
[13]
Maxwell's equations (Covariant formulation)
|
where the partial derivatives may be written in various ways, see
4-gradient. The first equation listed above corresponds to both
Gauss's Law (for β = 0) and the
Ampère-Maxwell Law (for β = 1, 2, 3). The second equation corresponds to the two remaining equations,
Gauss's law for magnetism (for β = 0) and
Faraday's Law (for β = 1, 2, 3).
These tensor equations are
manifestly-covariant,
meaning the equations can be seen to be covariant by the index
positions. This short form of writing Maxwell's equations illustrates an
idea shared amongst some physicists, namely that the laws of physics
take on a simpler form when written using
tensors.
By lowering the indices on
Fαβ to obtain
Fαβ (see
raising and lowering indices):
the second equation can be written in terms of
Fαβ as:
where
is the contravariant
Levi-Civita symbol. Notice the
cyclic permutation of indices in this equation:
.
Another covariant electromagnetic object is the
electromagnetic stress-energy tensor, a covariant rank-2 tensor which includes the
Poynting vector,
Maxwell stress tensor, and electromagnetic energy density.
4-potential
The EM field tensor can also be written
[14]
where
is the
four-potential and
is the
four-position.
Using the 4-potential in the Lorenz gauge, an alternative
manifestly-covariant formulation can be found in a single equation (a
generalization of an equation due to
Bernhard Riemann by
Arnold Sommerfeld, known as the Riemann–Sommerfeld equation,
[15] or the covariant form of the Maxwell equations
[16]):
Maxwell's equations (Covariant Lorenz gauge formulation)
|
where
is the
d'Alembertian operator, or four-Laplacian. For a more comprehensive presentation of these topics, see
Covariant formulation of classical electromagnetism.