equations-of-physics

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April 10, 2026

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April 10, 2026

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"We have a wave which leaves the material source and goes outward at the velocity c, which is the speed of light. ... From a historical point of view, it wasn’t known that the coefficient c in Maxwell’s equations was also the speed of light propagation. There was just a constant in the equations. We have called it c from the beginning, because we knew what it would turn out to be. We didn’t think it would be sensible to make you learn the formulas with a different constant and then go back to substitute c wherever it belonged. ... just by experiments with charges and currents we find a number c2 which turns out to be the square of the velocity of propagation of electromagnetic influences. From static measurements—by measuring the forces between two unit charges and between two unit currents—we find that c = 3.00 × 108 meters/sec. When Maxwell first made this calculation with his equations, he said that bundles of electric and magnetic fields should be propagated at this speed. He also remarked on the mysterious coincidence that this was the same as the speed of light. “We can scarcely avoid the inference,” said Maxwell, “that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.” Maxwell had made one of the great unifications of physics. Before his time, there was light, and there was electricity and magnetism. The latter two had been unified by the experimental work of Faraday, Oersted, and Ampère. Then, all of a sudden, light was no longer “something else,” but was only electricity and magnetism in this new form—little pieces of electric and magnetic fields which propagate through space on their own."

- Maxwell's equations

• 0 likes• partial-differential-equations• equations-of-physics•
"Dirac's equation consists of... four separate s to describe electrons. Two components have an... immediately successful interpretation... describing the two possible directions of an electron's spin. ...The extra ...equations contain solutions with negative energy... Assuming Dirac's equation, if you start with an electron in one of the positive-energy solutions, you can calculate the rate for it to emit a photon and move into one of the negative-energy solutions. Energy must be conserved, but that... means... the emitted photon has higher energy than the electron that emitted it! ...Dirac was well aware of this problem. ...He proposed ...empty' space ...contains electrons obeying all the negative-energy solutions. ... A positive-energy electron can't go to a negative energy solution, because there's always another electron already there, and the won't allow a second... [T]he idea... the ordinary state of 'empty' space is far from empty... a different word for it... is 'vacuum'... a medium, with dynamical properties... [S]hine light [photons with enough energy] on the vacuum... then a negative-energy electron can absorb... [a] photon... and go into a positive-energy solution... an ordinary electron... But in the final state there is... a hole... originally occupied by the negative-energy electron... [I]f there is a pre-existing hole... a positive-energy electron can emit a photon and occupy the vacant negative-energy solution. ...Dirac's first hole-theory paper was... 'A theory of electrons and protons'."

- Dirac equation

• 0 likes• equations-of-physics• partial-differential-equations•