Paper
12 September 2014 On the electrodynamics of moving permanent dipoles in external electromagnetic fields
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Abstract
The classical theory of electrodynamics is built upon Maxwell’s equations and the concepts of electromagnetic field, force, energy and momentum, which are intimately tied together by Poynting’s theorem and the Lorentz force law. Whereas Maxwell’s macroscopic equations relate the electric and magnetic fields to their material sources (i.e., charge, current, polarization and magnetization), Poynting’s theorem governs the flow of electromagnetic energy and its exchange between fields and material media, while the Lorentz law regulates the back-and-forth transfer of momentum between the media and the fields. The close association of momentum with energy thus demands that the Poynting theorem and the Lorentz law remain consistent with each other, while, at the same time, ensuring compliance with the conservation laws of energy, linear momentum, and angular momentum. This paper shows how a consistent application of the aforementioned laws of electrodynamics to moving permanent dipoles (both electric and magnetic) brings into play the rest-mass of the dipoles. The rest mass must vary in response to external electromagnetic fields if the overall energy of the system is to be conserved. The physical basis for the inferred variations of the rest-mass appears to be an interference between the internal fields of the dipoles and the externally applied fields. We use two different formulations of the classical theory in which energy and momentum relate differently to the fields, yet we find identical behavior for the restmass in both formulations.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Masud Mansuripur "On the electrodynamics of moving permanent dipoles in external electromagnetic fields", Proc. SPIE 9160, Metamaterials: Fundamentals and Applications 2014, 91600X (12 September 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2060566
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KEYWORDS
Particles

Magnetism

Electrodynamics

Electromagnetism

Maxwell's equations

Polarization

Optical spheres

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