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..one has to remember that the magnetic field is simply the electric field as seen from a different frame of reference...
I never could do the maths, but I don't care.
I have looked up the derivation of the wave equation via the Laplacian of the E or H field in phasor form and it is completely symmetric: a time variation in either produces an em wave.
If the magnet falls over in a non-existent forest with no observers, does it matter?
A monopole would throw a spanner in the maths where divH is required to be =0.
The force acting on the needle is electromagnetic.
Pushing electrons to and fro in an antenna is cyclical (Particularly if the antenna is resonant.)
Quote from: Bored chemist on 22/01/2024 13:51:50Pushing electrons to and fro in an antenna is cyclical (Particularly if the antenna is resonant.)but doesn't involve any rotation.
Quote from: Eternal Student on 21/01/2024 00:44:19Starting from the beginning, a rotating magnetic dipole (or electric dipole) should generate e-m radiation. I think not. You need to accelerate a charge to generate a photon. So it is entirely possible that a spinning neutron star could excite radiation from any gas cloud, plasma or passing ion, but a magnet in an infinite vacuum won't.
Starting from the beginning, a rotating magnetic dipole (or electric dipole) should generate e-m radiation.
So let's have a 1 tesla bar magnet spinning at 1000Hz in a vacuum. Can anyone please describe its electromagnetic emission spectrum? I just can't visualise it!
...The carrier of the EM force is the photon.So, in this case, I know that a rotating magnet emits EM radiation. That force is periodic and thus there must be a component of the EM radiation with the same period.So it must have photons with energies corresponding to the frequency of rotation of the record player.Re. "but a magnet in an infinite vacuum won't. "If the magnet falls over in a non-existent forest with no observers, does it matter?I contend that it will still emit EM radiation.Imagine that we somehow have a magnet in an infinite empty universe.We set it spinning (We know it is spinning, because an ant who happens to be standing on it notices the centrifugal effect).After a while, and at some distance from the magnet, we magically call a compass needle into being.Does the needle have to "wait" for EM radiation from the magnet to reach it, or is that changing field already there?I can't see how it would so I think the magnet must have been emitting EM radiation all along.But... if there's EM radiation, then there are photons.And, if there are photons, the universe isn't empty.So the solution may be that you can't have a rotating magnet in an empty universe.All seems a bit esoteric..But let's ignore nearly the whole of the universe and consider some hydrogen atoms.Some of them have the magnetic dipoles of the electron and the proton aligned parallel, and in others it's antiparallel.And if one happens to flip from the first state to the second, it emits a photon of about 21 cm wavelength.That photon crosses space and is picked up many years later by a detector here on earth.But we have only been constructing such detectors for about 100 years.So, for a source more than 100 light years away, the detector had not been built when the photon was emitted.I think that's close enough to " we magically call a compass needle into being." for the analogy to work.An electron- with a magnetic diploe moment- was flipped and sent out EM radiation. It did so in a universe in which the detector did not exist.You may say that, without the proton of the hydrogen atom, the energy of the photon would be undefined. Which is a fair pointBut, at that point, I think you need to be able to do Laplace transforms and, as I said, I can't do the maths.
What do you mean 'to accelerate a charge to generate a photon'?How does it work?
Quote from: Jaaanosik on Yesterday at 20:37:01Quote What do you mean 'to accelerate a charge to generate a photon'? How does it work? I'm not alancalverd.... but one way you could do this is with a device called a cyclotron. Put a charged particle like a proton in to a cyclotron with some initial velocity (and remember to switch the magnetic field generator on). Then e-m radiation will be emitted.
What do you mean 'to accelerate a charge to generate a photon'? How does it work?
Adding energy to a charged particle, acceleration in a straight line, does not generate a photon.
Hi.Quote from: Jaaanosik on 23/01/2024 02:11:14Adding energy to a charged particle, acceleration in a straight line, does not generate a photon. I'm fairly sure it would generate some photons.The link that you provided gives a formula for the power radiated when acceleration is parallel to the velocity of the charged particle. When any charged particle (such as an electron, a proton, or an ion) accelerates, energy is radiated in the form of electromagnetic waves. - Taken from a slightly different Wikipedia page. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larmor_formula The only minor issue that will arise is whether all of this oscillation in E and B fields would always be recognisable as "a photon", a discrete packet of energy. Classically, it's an oscillation in the E and B fields but it should be a continous emission rather than something that occurrs in bursts at discrete places and times.Best Wishes.
This comes back to 'who is looking'.
you said to use LaTex. I had no clue what you were talking about and I should have asked-
To [u]underline[/u] you enclose the start and end tags [u] and [/u] around the thing you want to underline.
the [tex] and [/tex] tags mark the start and end of the LaTeX code block.[tex] \sum \limits_{i=1}^n {3i} [/tex]Inside of the LaTeX code block you can use code that signifies or "marks up" the symbols you want.The bit of code above would have produced a Sigma symbol for a sum over an index i from 1 to n of terms 3i.
This should be the sum from i=1 to 2n of terms 3i.[tex] \sum \limits_{i=1}^{2n} {3i} [/tex]