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how does special relativity imply magnetism from electrostatics?
That is fascinating! I had always thought of electricity and magnetism as direct properties of still and moving charges as in Faradays experiments long before relativity and had not relised that they were linked via relativity in that way.It is quite obvious when you see it! The speed of light just slots in there as part of the standard electromagnetic radiation equations which are just like the relatavistic ones.
So the particle see more positive ions (per unit distance) than negative electrons and it will experience a coulombian repulsion from the thread.From laboratory's frame of reference this force is called "Lorentz Force" and is attributed to a magnetic field B: F = qvΛB where Λ means vectorial product.
QuoteSo the particle see more positive ions (per unit distance) than negative electrons and it will experience a coulombian repulsion from the thread.From laboratory's frame of reference this force is called "Lorentz Force" and is attributed to a magnetic field B: F = qv?B where ? means vectorial product.I can't quite picture your model here. The force from the vector product would be at right angles(?) to the other two.Have you a reference (not too hard) that I could look up?
So the particle see more positive ions (per unit distance) than negative electrons and it will experience a coulombian repulsion from the thread.From laboratory's frame of reference this force is called "Lorentz Force" and is attributed to a magnetic field B: F = qv?B where ? means vectorial product.
Also, charges move VERY slowly in metals. SR doesn't usually have much of an effect at 0.001m/s.
The force from the vector product would be at right angles(?) to the other two.
So how does the gravitomagnetic effect work then? If I'm moving very quickly over a flat plane of matter then the density will increase and I will be attracted to it, right? OH, so that's how the Podkletnov anti-grav machine works (in theory)!...but wait, spinning something very fast should generate an attraction to it, not a repulsion?!?! So how does the Podkletnov machine work then?
QuoteAlso, charges move VERY slowly in metals. SR doesn't usually have much of an effect at 0.001m/s.It's just an example of multiplying a very small quantity by a big number to give quite a big number.It's counter-intuitive because we, as you say, usually associate SR with high speed. The Lorenz formula works at all speeds, though.QuoteThe force from the vector product would be at right angles(?) to the other two.The force between two parallel wires is such as to pull them together (or push apart). The SR treatment of the situation just predicts a bit more more repulsion / attraction because of the apparent imbalance in the number of 'perceived' electric charges.If you only had positive charges - say 1coulomb's worth on two objects, one metre apart, the force would be immense. In reality, we only deal with surplus / unbalanced charges so electrostatic forces are usually small - as are the forces between conductors, too.This, alternative approach does away with the need for vector products - the forces are reduced to Coulomb forces. The results don't disagree with the classical results - it's just a different way of getting to them.