On the Notation of Maxwell's Equations (Renamed On the Notation of the Field Equations of Electrodynamics): Difference between revisions
Appearance
Imported from text file |
Imported from text file |
||
| Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
Maxwell's equations are the cornerstone in electrodynamics. Despite the fact that these equations are more than a hundred years old, they are still subject to changes in content or notation. To get an impression over the historical development of Maxwell's equations, the equation systems in different notations are summarized.[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | Maxwell's equations are the cornerstone in electrodynamics. Despite the fact that these equations are more than a hundred years old, they are still subject to changes in content or notation. To get an impression over the historical development of Maxwell's equations, the equation systems in different notations are summarized. | ||
[[Category:Scientific Paper|notation maxwell 's equations renamed notation field equations electrodynamics]] | |||
[[Category:Electrodynamics]] | [[Category:Electrodynamics]] | ||
Revision as of 13:50, 1 January 2017
| Scientific Paper | |
|---|---|
| Title | On the Notation of Maxwell\'s Equations (Renamed On the Notation of the Field Equations of Electrodynamics) |
| Read in full | Link to paper |
| Author(s) | Andre Waser |
| Keywords | {{{keywords}}} |
| Published | 2000 |
| Journal | None |
| No. of pages | 14 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
Maxwell's equations are the cornerstone in electrodynamics. Despite the fact that these equations are more than a hundred years old, they are still subject to changes in content or notation. To get an impression over the historical development of Maxwell's equations, the equation systems in different notations are summarized.