Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /

This is a remarkable book. Arthur Yaghjian is by training and profession an electrical engineer; but he has a deep interest in fundamental questions usually reserved for physicists. Working largely in isolation he has studied the relevant papers of an enormous literature accumulated over a century. The result is a fresh and novel approach to old problems and to their solution. Physicists since Lorentz have looked at the problem of the equations of motion of a charged object primarily as a problem for the description of a fundamental particle, typically an electron. Yaghjian considers a mac- scopic object, a spherical insulator with a surface charge. was therefore not tempted to take the point limit, and he thus avoided the pitfalls that have misguided research in this field since Dirac's famous paper of 1938. Perhaps the author's greatest achievement was the discovery that one does not need to invoke quantum mechanics and the correspondence pr- ciple in order to exclude the unphysical solutions (runaway and pre-acc- eration solutions). Rather, as he discovered, the derivation of the classical equations of motion from the Maxwell-Lorentz equations is invalid when the time rate of change of the dynamical variables too large (even in the relativistic case). Therefore, solutions that show such behavior are inc- sistent consequences. The classical theory thus shown to be physically consistent by itself. It embarrassing--to say the least--that this obs- vation had not been made before.

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Main Authors: Yaghjian, Arthur D. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: New York, NY : Springer New York, 1992
Subjects:Physics., Mathematics., Gravitation., Optics., Electrodynamics., Optics and Electrodynamics., Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory., Mathematics, general.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73967-0
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1716422018-07-30T22:48:57ZRelativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model / Yaghjian, Arthur D. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textNew York, NY : Springer New York,1992.engThis is a remarkable book. Arthur Yaghjian is by training and profession an electrical engineer; but he has a deep interest in fundamental questions usually reserved for physicists. Working largely in isolation he has studied the relevant papers of an enormous literature accumulated over a century. The result is a fresh and novel approach to old problems and to their solution. Physicists since Lorentz have looked at the problem of the equations of motion of a charged object primarily as a problem for the description of a fundamental particle, typically an electron. Yaghjian considers a mac- scopic object, a spherical insulator with a surface charge. was therefore not tempted to take the point limit, and he thus avoided the pitfalls that have misguided research in this field since Dirac's famous paper of 1938. Perhaps the author's greatest achievement was the discovery that one does not need to invoke quantum mechanics and the correspondence pr- ciple in order to exclude the unphysical solutions (runaway and pre-acc- eration solutions). Rather, as he discovered, the derivation of the classical equations of motion from the Maxwell-Lorentz equations is invalid when the time rate of change of the dynamical variables too large (even in the relativistic case). Therefore, solutions that show such behavior are inc- sistent consequences. The classical theory thus shown to be physically consistent by itself. It embarrassing--to say the least--that this obs- vation had not been made before.and Summary of Results -- Lorentz-Abraham Force and Power Equations -- Derivation of Force and Power Equations -- Internal Binding Forces -- Electromagnetic, Electrostatic, Bare, Measured, and Insulator Masses -- Transformation and Redefinition of Force-power and Momentum-Energy -- Momentum and Energy Relations -- Solutions to the Equation of Motion.This is a remarkable book. Arthur Yaghjian is by training and profession an electrical engineer; but he has a deep interest in fundamental questions usually reserved for physicists. Working largely in isolation he has studied the relevant papers of an enormous literature accumulated over a century. The result is a fresh and novel approach to old problems and to their solution. Physicists since Lorentz have looked at the problem of the equations of motion of a charged object primarily as a problem for the description of a fundamental particle, typically an electron. Yaghjian considers a mac- scopic object, a spherical insulator with a surface charge. was therefore not tempted to take the point limit, and he thus avoided the pitfalls that have misguided research in this field since Dirac's famous paper of 1938. Perhaps the author's greatest achievement was the discovery that one does not need to invoke quantum mechanics and the correspondence pr- ciple in order to exclude the unphysical solutions (runaway and pre-acc- eration solutions). Rather, as he discovered, the derivation of the classical equations of motion from the Maxwell-Lorentz equations is invalid when the time rate of change of the dynamical variables too large (even in the relativistic case). Therefore, solutions that show such behavior are inc- sistent consequences. The classical theory thus shown to be physically consistent by itself. It embarrassing--to say the least--that this obs- vation had not been made before.Physics.Mathematics.Gravitation.Optics.Electrodynamics.Physics.Optics and Electrodynamics.Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.Mathematics, general.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73967-0URN:ISBN:9780387739670
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Physics.
Mathematics.
Gravitation.
Optics.
Electrodynamics.
Physics.
Optics and Electrodynamics.
Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
Mathematics, general.
Physics.
Mathematics.
Gravitation.
Optics.
Electrodynamics.
Physics.
Optics and Electrodynamics.
Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
Mathematics, general.
spellingShingle Physics.
Mathematics.
Gravitation.
Optics.
Electrodynamics.
Physics.
Optics and Electrodynamics.
Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
Mathematics, general.
Physics.
Mathematics.
Gravitation.
Optics.
Electrodynamics.
Physics.
Optics and Electrodynamics.
Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
Mathematics, general.
Yaghjian, Arthur D. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
description This is a remarkable book. Arthur Yaghjian is by training and profession an electrical engineer; but he has a deep interest in fundamental questions usually reserved for physicists. Working largely in isolation he has studied the relevant papers of an enormous literature accumulated over a century. The result is a fresh and novel approach to old problems and to their solution. Physicists since Lorentz have looked at the problem of the equations of motion of a charged object primarily as a problem for the description of a fundamental particle, typically an electron. Yaghjian considers a mac- scopic object, a spherical insulator with a surface charge. was therefore not tempted to take the point limit, and he thus avoided the pitfalls that have misguided research in this field since Dirac's famous paper of 1938. Perhaps the author's greatest achievement was the discovery that one does not need to invoke quantum mechanics and the correspondence pr- ciple in order to exclude the unphysical solutions (runaway and pre-acc- eration solutions). Rather, as he discovered, the derivation of the classical equations of motion from the Maxwell-Lorentz equations is invalid when the time rate of change of the dynamical variables too large (even in the relativistic case). Therefore, solutions that show such behavior are inc- sistent consequences. The classical theory thus shown to be physically consistent by itself. It embarrassing--to say the least--that this obs- vation had not been made before.
format Texto
topic_facet Physics.
Mathematics.
Gravitation.
Optics.
Electrodynamics.
Physics.
Optics and Electrodynamics.
Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory.
Mathematics, general.
author Yaghjian, Arthur D. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Yaghjian, Arthur D. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Yaghjian, Arthur D. author.
title Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
title_short Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
title_full Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
title_fullStr Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
title_full_unstemmed Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Sphere [electronic resource] : Updating the Lorentz-Abraham Model /
title_sort relativistic dynamics of a charged sphere [electronic resource] : updating the lorentz-abraham model /
publisher New York, NY : Springer New York,
publishDate 1992
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73967-0
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