Electricity and Magnetism (Student Physics Series)

Electricity and Magnetism by E. R. Dobbs, published by Springer on May 31, 1984, is a concise 142-page volume that explores the fundamental principles of electromagnetism. This book addresses key questions about electricity and magnetism, providing a clear understanding of these concepts as essential components of undergraduate physics. It presents both classical and microscopic explanations, illustrating how classical concepts such as electric charge, electric and magnetic fields, and electric currents relate to quantum ideas like electrons and photons.
Readers will find a logical progression of topics that begins with classical explanations, which are foundational for understanding physical phenomena, particularly at room temperature and low energy. The text emphasizes the historical development of electromagnetism, linking classical theories to their microscopic counterparts. By examining the nature of magnetic materials and the principles underlying electromagnetism, this edition serves as a valuable resource for students seeking to grasp the complexities of this subject in a structured manner.
Official synopsis Publisher
Electromagnetism is basic to our understanding of the properties of matter and yet is often regarded as a difficult part of an under graduate physics course. In this book answers are developed from first principles to such questions as: What is electricity? What is electromagnetism? Why are some materials magnetic and others non-magnetic? What is magnetism? Physics answers these questions in two related ways. On the one hand the classical explanation is in terms of classical concepts: electric charge q, electric and magnetic fields (E and B) and electric currents. On the other hand the microscopic (or ‘atomic ‘) explanation is in terms of quantum concepts: electrons, nuclei, electron orbits in atoms, electron spin and photons. Microscopic explanations underlie classical ones, but do not deny them. The great triumphs of classical physics are mechanics, gravitation, thermodynamics, electromagnetism and relativity. Historically they began at the time of Newton (seventeenth century) and were completed by Maxwell (nineteenth century) and Einstein (early twentieth century). Microscopic explanations began with J J. Thomson’s discovery of the electron in 1897. For most physical phenomena it is best to seek a classical explanation first, especially phenomena at room temperature, or low energy, when quantum effects are small. Although this text is primarily concerned with classical explanations in a logical, self-consistent sequence, they are related to microscopic (quantum) explanations at each stage.
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