Static E and B fields and static EM fields

Main articles: electrostatics, magnetostatics, and magnetism When an EM field (see electromagnetic tensor) is not varying in time, it may be seen as a purely electrical field or a purely magnetic field, or a mixture of both. However the general case of a static EM...

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Electromagnetic field as a feedback loop

The behavior of the electromagnetic field can be resolved into four different parts of a loop: the electric and magnetic fields are generated by electric charges, the electric and magnetic fields interact with each other, the electric and magnetic fields produce forces on electric charges,...

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Dynamics of the electromagnetic field

In the past, electrically charged objects were thought to produce two different, unrelated types of field associated with their charge property. An electric field is produced when the charge is stationary with respect to an observer measuring the properties of the charge, and a magnetic...

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Discrete structure

The electromagnetic field may be thought of in a more ‘coarse’ way. Experiments reveal that in some circumstances electromagnetic energy transfer is better described as being carried in the form of packets called quanta (in this case, photons) with a fixed frequency. Planck’s relation links...

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Continuous structure

Classically, electric and magnetic fields are thought of as being produced by smooth motions of charged objects. For example, oscillating charges produce electric and magnetic fields that may be viewed in a ‘smooth’, continuous, wavelike fashion. In this case, energy is viewed as being transferred...

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Photoelectric effect

Main article: Photoelectric effect In another paper published in that same year, Albert Einstein undermined the very foundations of classical electromagnetism. His theory of the photoelectric effect (for which he won the Nobel prize for physics) posited that light could exist in discrete particle-like quantities,...

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Classical electrodynamics

Main article: Classical electrodynamics The scientist William Gilbert proposed, in his De Magnete (1600), that electricity and magnetism, while both capable of causing attraction and repulsion of objects, were distinct effects. Mariners had noticed that lightning strikes had the ability to disturb a compass needle,...

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Overview

The electromagnetic force is amongst the four known fundamental forces. The other fundamental forces are: the strong nuclear force, which binds quarks to make nucleons, and binds nucleons to nuclei, the weak nuclear force, which in turn causes certain forms of decay, and the gravitation....

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History of the theory

See also: History of electromagnetic theory Originally electricity and magnetism were considered two separate forces. This view changed, however, with the publication of James Clerk Maxwell’s 1873 Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism the location where the interactions of bad and the good charges were been...

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Electromagnetism

Electromagnetism is the branch of science related to the forces that occur between electrically charged particles. In electromagnetic theory these forces are explained using electromagnetic fields. Electromagnetic force is one of the four fundamental interactions in the wild, the opposite three being the strong interaction,...

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