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Lorentz force

In physics (specifically in electromagnetism) the Lorentz force (or electromagnetic force) is the combination of electric and magnetic force on a point charge due to electromagnetic fields. A particle of charge q moving with a velocity v in an electric field E and a magnetic field B experiences a force of

Lorentz force acting on fast-moving charged particles in a bubble chamber. Positive and negative charge trajectories curve in opposite directions.
(in SI units[1][2]). It says that the electromagnetic force on a charge q is a combination of a force in the direction of the electric field E proportional to the magnitude of the field and the quantity of charge, and a force at right angles to the magnetic field B and the velocity v of the charge, proportional to the magnitude of the field, the charge, and the velocity. Variations on this basic formula describe the magnetic force on a current-carrying wire (sometimes called Laplace force), the electromotive force in a wire loop moving through a magnetic field (an aspect of Faraday's law of induction), and the force on a moving charged particle.

Historians suggest that the law is implicit in a paper by James Clerk Maxwell, published in 1865.[3] Hendrik Lorentz arrived at a complete derivation in 1895,[4] identifying the contribution of the electric force a few years after Oliver Heaviside correctly identified the contribution of the magnetic force.[5]

Lorentz force law as the definition of E and B

 
Trajectory of a particle with a positive or negative charge q under the influence of a magnetic field B, which is directed perpendicularly out of the screen.
 
Beam of electrons moving in a circle, due to the presence of a magnetic field. Purple light revealing the electron's path in this Teltron tube is created by the electrons colliding with gas molecules.
Charged particles experiencing the Lorentz force.

In many textbook treatments of classical electromagnetism, the Lorentz force law is used as the definition of the electric and magnetic fields E and B.[6][7][8] To be specific, the Lorentz force is understood to be the following empirical statement:

The electromagnetic force F on a test charge at a given point and time is a certain function of its charge q and velocity v, which can be parameterized by exactly two vectors E and B, in the functional form:

 

This is valid, even for particles approaching the speed of light (that is, magnitude of v, |v| ≈ c).[9] So the two vector fields E and B are thereby defined throughout space and time, and these are called the "electric field" and "magnetic field". The fields are defined everywhere in space and time with respect to what force a test charge would receive regardless of whether a charge is present to experience the force.

As a definition of E and B, the Lorentz force is only a definition in principle because a real particle (as opposed to the hypothetical "test charge" of infinitesimally-small mass and charge) would generate its own finite E and B fields, which would alter the electromagnetic force that it experiences.[10] In addition, if the charge experiences acceleration, as if forced into a curved trajectory, it emits radiation that causes it to lose kinetic energy. See for example Bremsstrahlung and synchrotron light. These effects occur through both a direct effect (called the radiation reaction force) and indirectly (by affecting the motion of nearby charges and currents).

Equation

Charged particle

 
Lorentz force F on a charged particle (of charge q) in motion (instantaneous velocity v). The E field and B field vary in space and time.

The force F acting on a particle of electric charge q with instantaneous velocity v, due to an external electric field E and magnetic field B, is given by (in SI units[1]):[11]

 

where × is the vector cross product (all boldface quantities are vectors). In terms of Cartesian components, we have:

 
 
 

In general, the electric and magnetic fields are functions of the position and time. Therefore, explicitly, the Lorentz force can be written as:

 

in which r is the position vector of the charged particle, t is time, and the overdot is a time derivative.

A positively charged particle will be accelerated in the same linear orientation as the E field, but will curve perpendicularly to both the instantaneous velocity vector v and the B field according to the right-hand rule (in detail, if the fingers of the right hand are extended to point in the direction of v and are then curled to point in the direction of B, then the extended thumb will point in the direction of F).

The term qE is called the electric force, while the term q(v × B) is called the magnetic force.[12] According to some definitions, the term "Lorentz force" refers specifically to the formula for the magnetic force,[13] with the total electromagnetic force (including the electric force) given some other (nonstandard) name. This article will not follow this nomenclature: In what follows, the term "Lorentz force" will refer to the expression for the total force.

The magnetic force component of the Lorentz force manifests itself as the force that acts on a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field. In that context, it is also called the Laplace force.

The Lorentz force is a force exerted by the electromagnetic field on the charged particle, that is, it is the rate at which linear momentum is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle. Associated with it is the power which is the rate at which energy is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle. That power is

 
Notice that the magnetic field does not contribute to the power because the magnetic force is always perpendicular to the velocity of the particle.

Continuous charge distribution

 
Lorentz force (per unit 3-volume) f on a continuous charge distribution (charge density ρ) in motion. The 3-current density J corresponds to the motion of the charge element dq in volume element dV and varies throughout the continuum.

For a continuous charge distribution in motion, the Lorentz force equation becomes:

 

where   is the force on a small piece of the charge distribution with charge  . If both sides of this equation are divided by the volume of this small piece of the charge distribution  , the result is:

 
where   is the force density (force per unit volume) and   is the charge density (charge per unit volume). Next, the current density corresponding to the motion of the charge continuum is
 
so the continuous analogue to the equation is[14]

 

The total force is the volume integral over the charge distribution:

 

By eliminating   and  , using Maxwell's equations, and manipulating using the theorems of vector calculus, this form of the equation can be used to derive the Maxwell stress tensor  , in turn this can be combined with the Poynting vector   to obtain the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor T used in general relativity.[14]

In terms of   and  , another way to write the Lorentz force (per unit volume) is[14]

 
where   is the speed of light and · denotes the divergence of a tensor field. Rather than the amount of charge and its velocity in electric and magnetic fields, this equation relates the energy flux (flow of energy per unit time per unit distance) in the fields to the force exerted on a charge distribution. See Covariant formulation of classical electromagnetism for more details.

The density of power associated with the Lorentz force in a material medium is

 

If we separate the total charge and total current into their free and bound parts, we get that the density of the Lorentz force is

 

where:   is the density of free charge;   is the polarization density;   is the density of free current; and   is the magnetization density. In this way, the Lorentz force can explain the torque applied to a permanent magnet by the magnetic field. The density of the associated power is

 

Equation in cgs units

The above-mentioned formulae use SI units which are the most common. In older CGS-Gaussian units, which are somewhat more common among some theoretical physicists as well as condensed matter experimentalists, one has instead

 
where c is the speed of light. Although this equation looks slightly different, it is equivalent, since one has the following relations:[1]
 
where ε0 is the vacuum permittivity and μ0 the vacuum permeability. In practice, the subscripts "G" and "SI" are omitted, and the unit system must be determined from context.

History

 
Lorentz' theory of electrons. Formulas for the Lorentz force (I, ponderomotive force) and the Maxwell equations for the divergence of the electrical field E (II) and the magnetic field B (III), La théorie electromagnétique de Maxwell et son application aux corps mouvants, 1892, p. 451. V is the velocity of light.

Early attempts to quantitatively describe the electromagnetic force were made in the mid-18th century. It was proposed that the force on magnetic poles, by Johann Tobias Mayer and others in 1760,[15] and electrically charged objects, by Henry Cavendish in 1762,[16] obeyed an inverse-square law. However, in both cases the experimental proof was neither complete nor conclusive. It was not until 1784 when Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, using a torsion balance, was able to definitively show through experiment that this was true.[17] Soon after the discovery in 1820 by Hans Christian Ørsted that a magnetic needle is acted on by a voltaic current, André-Marie Ampère that same year was able to devise through experimentation the formula for the angular dependence of the force between two current elements.[18][19] In all these descriptions, the force was always described in terms of the properties of the matter involved and the distances between two masses or charges rather than in terms of electric and magnetic fields.[20]

The modern concept of electric and magnetic fields first arose in the theories of Michael Faraday, particularly his idea of lines of force, later to be given full mathematical description by Lord Kelvin and James Clerk Maxwell.[21] From a modern perspective it is possible to identify in Maxwell's 1865 formulation of his field equations a form of the Lorentz force equation in relation to electric currents,[3] although in the time of Maxwell it was not evident how his equations related to the forces on moving charged objects. J. J. Thomson was the first to attempt to derive from Maxwell's field equations the electromagnetic forces on a moving charged object in terms of the object's properties and external fields. Interested in determining the electromagnetic behavior of the charged particles in cathode rays, Thomson published a paper in 1881 wherein he gave the force on the particles due to an external magnetic field as[5][22]

 
Thomson derived the correct basic form of the formula, but, because of some miscalculations and an incomplete description of the displacement current, included an incorrect scale-factor of a half in front of the formula. Oliver Heaviside invented the modern vector notation and applied it to Maxwell's field equations; he also (in 1885 and 1889) had fixed the mistakes of Thomson's derivation and arrived at the correct form of the magnetic force on a moving charged object.[5][23][24] Finally, in 1895,[4][25] Hendrik Lorentz derived the modern form of the formula for the electromagnetic force which includes the contributions to the total force from both the electric and the magnetic fields. Lorentz began by abandoning the Maxwellian descriptions of the ether and conduction. Instead, Lorentz made a distinction between matter and the luminiferous aether and sought to apply the Maxwell equations at a microscopic scale. Using Heaviside's version of the Maxwell equations for a stationary ether and applying Lagrangian mechanics (see below), Lorentz arrived at the correct and complete form of the force law that now bears his name.[26][27]

Trajectories of particles due to the Lorentz force

 
Charged particle drifts in a homogeneous magnetic field. (A) No disturbing force (B) With an electric field, E (C) With an independent force, F (e.g. gravity) (D) In an inhomogeneous magnetic field, grad H

In many cases of practical interest, the motion in a magnetic field of an electrically charged particle (such as an electron or ion in a plasma) can be treated as the superposition of a relatively fast circular motion around a point called the guiding center and a relatively slow drift of this point. The drift speeds may differ for various species depending on their charge states, masses, or temperatures, possibly resulting in electric currents or chemical separation.

Significance of the Lorentz force

While the modern Maxwell's equations describe how electrically charged particles and currents or moving charged particles give rise to electric and magnetic fields, the Lorentz force law completes that picture by describing the force acting on a moving point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields.[11][28] The Lorentz force law describes the effect of E and B upon a point charge, but such electromagnetic forces are not the entire picture. Charged particles are possibly coupled to other forces, notably gravity and nuclear forces. Thus, Maxwell's equations do not stand separate from other physical laws, but are coupled to them via the charge and current densities. The response of a point charge to the Lorentz law is one aspect; the generation of E and B by currents and charges is another.

In real materials the Lorentz force is inadequate to describe the collective behavior of charged particles, both in principle and as a matter of computation. The charged particles in a material medium not only respond to the E and B fields but also generate these fields. Complex transport equations must be solved to determine the time and spatial response of charges, for example, the Boltzmann equation or the Fokker–Planck equation or the Navier–Stokes equations. For example, see magnetohydrodynamics, fluid dynamics, electrohydrodynamics, superconductivity, stellar evolution. An entire physical apparatus for dealing with these matters has developed. See for example, Green–Kubo relations and Green's function (many-body theory).

Force on a current-carrying wire

 
Right-hand rule for a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field B

When a wire carrying an electric current is placed in a magnetic field, each of the moving charges, which comprise the current, experiences the Lorentz force, and together they can create a macroscopic force on the wire (sometimes called the Laplace force). By combining the Lorentz force law above with the definition of electric current, the following equation results, in the case of a straight, stationary wire:[29]

 

where is a vector whose magnitude is the length of wire, and whose direction is along the wire, aligned with the direction of conventional current charge flow I.

If the wire is not straight but curved, the force on it can be computed by applying this formula to each infinitesimal segment of wire  , then adding up all these forces by integration. Formally, the net force on a stationary, rigid wire carrying a steady current I is

 

This is the net force. In addition, there will usually be torque, plus other effects if the wire is not perfectly rigid.

One application of this is Ampère's force law, which describes how two current-carrying wires can attract or repel each other, since each experiences a Lorentz force from the other's magnetic field. For more information, see the article: Ampère's force law.

EMF

The magnetic force (qv × B) component of the Lorentz force is responsible for motional electromotive force (or motional EMF), the phenomenon underlying many electrical generators. When a conductor is moved through a magnetic field, the magnetic field exerts opposite forces on electrons and nuclei in the wire, and this creates the EMF. The term "motional EMF" is applied to this phenomenon, since the EMF is due to the motion of the wire.

In other electrical generators, the magnets move, while the conductors do not. In this case, the EMF is due to the electric force (qE) term in the Lorentz Force equation. The electric field in question is created by the changing magnetic field, resulting in an induced EMF, as described by the Maxwell–Faraday equation (one of the four modern Maxwell's equations).[30]

Both of these EMFs, despite their apparently distinct origins, are described by the same equation, namely, the EMF is the rate of change of magnetic flux through the wire. (This is Faraday's law of induction, see below.) Einstein's special theory of relativity was partially motivated by the desire to better understand this link between the two effects.[30] In fact, the electric and magnetic fields are different facets of the same electromagnetic field, and in moving from one inertial frame to another, the solenoidal vector field portion of the E-field can change in whole or in part to a B-field or vice versa.[31]

Lorentz force and Faraday's law of induction

 
Lorentz force -image on a wall in Leiden

Given a loop of wire in a magnetic field, Faraday's law of induction states the induced electromotive force (EMF) in the wire is:

 
where
 
is the magnetic flux through the loop, B is the magnetic field, Σ(t) is a surface bounded by the closed contour ∂Σ(t), at time t, dA is an infinitesimal vector area element of Σ(t) (magnitude is the area of an infinitesimal patch of surface, direction is orthogonal to that surface patch).

The sign of the EMF is determined by Lenz's law. Note that this is valid for not only a stationary wire – but also for a moving wire.

From Faraday's law of induction (that is valid for a moving wire, for instance in a motor) and the Maxwell Equations, the Lorentz Force can be deduced. The reverse is also true, the Lorentz force and the Maxwell Equations can be used to derive the Faraday Law.

Let Σ(t) be the moving wire, moving together without rotation and with constant velocity v and Σ(t) be the internal surface of the wire. The EMF around the closed path ∂Σ(t) is given by:[32]

 

where

 
is the electric field and d is an infinitesimal vector element of the contour ∂Σ(t).

NB: Both d and dA have a sign ambiguity; to get the correct sign, the right-hand rule is used, as explained in the article Kelvin–Stokes theorem.

The above result can be compared with the version of Faraday's law of induction that appears in the modern Maxwell's equations, called here the Maxwell–Faraday equation:

 

The Maxwell–Faraday equation also can be written in an integral form using the Kelvin–Stokes theorem.[33]

So we have, the Maxwell Faraday equation:

 

and the Faraday Law,

 

The two are equivalent if the wire is not moving. Using the Leibniz integral rule and that div B = 0, results in,

 

and using the Maxwell Faraday equation,

 

since this is valid for any wire position it implies that,

 

Faraday's law of induction holds whether the loop of wire is rigid and stationary, or in motion or in process of deformation, and it holds whether the magnetic field is constant in time or changing. However, there are cases where Faraday's law is either inadequate or difficult to use, and application of the underlying Lorentz force law is necessary. See inapplicability of Faraday's law.

If the magnetic field is fixed in time and the conducting loop moves through the field, the magnetic flux ΦB linking the loop can change in several ways. For example, if the B-field varies with position, and the loop moves to a location with different B-field, ΦB will change. Alternatively, if the loop changes orientation with respect to the B-field, the B ⋅ dA differential element will change because of the different angle between B and dA, also changing ΦB. As a third example, if a portion of the circuit is swept through a uniform, time-independent B-field, and another portion of the circuit is held stationary, the flux linking the entire closed circuit can change due to the shift in relative position of the circuit's component parts with time (surface ∂Σ(t) time-dependent). In all three cases, Faraday's law of induction then predicts the EMF generated by the change in ΦB.

Note that the Maxwell Faraday's equation implies that the Electric Field E is non conservative when the Magnetic Field B varies in time, and is not expressible as the gradient of a scalar field, and not subject to the gradient theorem since its rotational is not zero.[32][34]

Lorentz force in terms of potentials

The E and B fields can be replaced by the magnetic vector potential A and (scalar) electrostatic potential ϕ by

 
 
where is the gradient, ∇⋅ is the divergence, and ∇× is the curl.

The force becomes

 

Using an identity for the triple product this can be rewritten as,

 

(Notice that the coordinates and the velocity components should be treated as independent variables, so the del operator acts only on  , not on  ; thus, there is no need of using Feynman's subscript notation in the equation above). Using the chain rule, the total derivative of   is:

 

so that the above expression becomes:

 

With v = , we can put the equation into the convenient Euler–Lagrange form

 

where

 
and
 

Lorentz force and analytical mechanics

The Lagrangian for a charged particle of mass m and charge q in an electromagnetic field equivalently describes the dynamics of the particle in terms of its energy, rather than the force exerted on it. The classical expression is given by:[35]

 

where A and ϕ are the potential fields as above. The quantity   can be thought as a velocity-dependent potential function.[36] Using Lagrange's equations, the equation for the Lorentz force given above can be obtained again.

Derivation of Lorentz force from classical Lagrangian (SI units)

For an A field, a particle moving with velocity v = has potential momentum  , so its potential energy is  . For a ϕ field, the particle's potential energy is  .

The total potential energy is then:

 
and the kinetic energy is:
 
hence the Lagrangian:
 
 

Lagrange's equations are

 
(same for y and z). So calculating the partial derivatives:
 
 

equating and simplifying:

 
 

and similarly for the y and z directions. Hence the force equation is:

 

The potential energy depends on the velocity of the particle, so the force is velocity dependent, so it is not conservative.

The relativistic Lagrangian is

 

The action is the relativistic arclength of the path of the particle in spacetime, minus the potential energy contribution, plus an extra contribution which quantum mechanically is an extra phase a charged particle gets when it is moving along a vector potential.

Derivation of Lorentz force from relativistic Lagrangian (SI units)

The equations of motion derived by extremizing the action (see matrix calculus for the notation):

 
 

are the same as Hamilton's equations of motion:

 
 

both are equivalent to the noncanonical form:

 

This formula is the Lorentz force, representing the rate at which the EM field adds relativistic momentum to the particle.

Relativistic form of the Lorentz force

Covariant form of the Lorentz force

Field tensor

Using the metric signature (1, −1, −1, −1), the Lorentz force for a charge q can be written in[37] covariant form:

 

where pα is the four-momentum, defined as

 

τ the proper time of the particle, Fαβ the contravariant electromagnetic tensor

 

and U is the covariant 4-velocity of the particle, defined as:

 
in which
 
is the Lorentz factor.

The fields are transformed to a frame moving with constant relative velocity by:

 

where Λμα is the Lorentz transformation tensor.

Translation to vector notation

The α = 1 component (x-component) of the force is

 

Substituting the components of the covariant electromagnetic tensor F yields

 

Using the components of covariant four-velocity yields

 

The calculation for α = 2, 3 (force components in the y and z directions) yields similar results, so collecting the 3 equations into one:

 
and since differentials in coordinate time dt and proper time are related by the Lorentz factor,
 
so we arrive at
 

This is precisely the Lorentz force law, however, it is important to note that p is the relativistic expression,

 

Lorentz force in spacetime algebra (STA)

The electric and magnetic fields are dependent on the velocity of an observer, so the relativistic form of the Lorentz force law can best be exhibited starting from a coordinate-independent expression for the electromagnetic and magnetic fields  , and an arbitrary time-direction,  . This can be settled through Space-Time Algebra (or the geometric algebra of space-time), a type of Clifford algebra defined on a pseudo-Euclidean space,[38] as

 
and
 
  is a space-time bivector (an oriented plane segment, just like a vector is an oriented line segment), which has six degrees of freedom corresponding to boosts (rotations in space-time planes) and rotations (rotations in space-space planes). The dot product with the vector   pulls a vector (in the space algebra) from the translational part, while the wedge-product creates a trivector (in the space algebra) who is dual to a vector which is the usual magnetic field vector. The relativistic velocity is given by the (time-like) changes in a time-position vector  , where
 
(which shows our choice for the metric) and the velocity is
 

The proper (invariant is an inadequate term because no transformation has been defined) form of the Lorentz force law is simply

 

Note that the order is important because between a bivector and a vector the dot product is anti-symmetric. Upon a spacetime split like one can obtain the velocity, and fields as above yielding the usual expression.

Lorentz force in general relativity

In the general theory of relativity the equation of motion for a particle with mass   and charge  , moving in a space with metric tensor   and electromagnetic field  , is given as

 
where   (  is taken along the trajectory),  , and  .

The equation can also be written as

 
where   is the Christoffel symbol (of the torsion-free metric connection in general relativity), or as
 
where   is the covariant differential in general relativity (metric, torsion-free).

Applications

The Lorentz force occurs in many devices, including:

In its manifestation as the Laplace force on an electric current in a conductor, this force occurs in many devices including:

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c In SI units, B is measured in teslas (symbol: T). In Gaussian-cgs units, B is measured in gauss (symbol: G). See e.g. "Geomagnetism Frequently Asked Questions". National Geophysical Data Center. Retrieved 21 October 2013.)
  2. ^ The H-field is measured in amperes per metre (A/m) in SI units, and in oersteds (Oe) in cgs units. "International system of units (SI)". NIST reference on constants, units, and uncertainty. National Institute of Standards and Technology. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  3. ^ a b Huray, Paul G. (2010). Maxwell's Equations. Wiley-IEEE. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-470-54276-7.
  4. ^ a b Per F. Dahl, Flash of the Cathode Rays: A History of J J Thomson's Electron, CRC Press, 1997, p. 10.
  5. ^ a b c Paul J. Nahin, Oliver Heaviside, JHU Press, 2002.
  6. ^ See, for example, Jackson, pp. 777–8.
  7. ^ J.A. Wheeler; C. Misner; K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. pp. 72–73. ISBN 0-7167-0344-0.. These authors use the Lorentz force in tensor form as definer of the electromagnetic tensor F, in turn the fields E and B.
  8. ^ I.S. Grant; W.R. Phillips; Manchester Physics (1990). Electromagnetism (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-471-92712-9.
  9. ^ I.S. Grant; W.R. Phillips; Manchester Physics (1990). Electromagnetism (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-471-92712-9.
  10. ^ "The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. II Ch. 1: Electromagnetism". www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu. Retrieved 2022-07-06.
  11. ^ a b See Jackson, page 2. The book lists the four modern Maxwell's equations, and then states, "Also essential for consideration of charged particle motion is the Lorentz force equation, F = q (E+ v × B), which gives the force acting on a point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields."
  12. ^ See Griffiths, page 204.
  13. ^ For example, see the website of the Lorentz Institute or Griffiths.
  14. ^ a b c Griffiths, David J. (1999). Introduction to electrodynamics. reprint. with corr. (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey [u.a.]: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-805326-0.
  15. ^ Delon, Michel (2001). Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment. Chicago, IL: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 538. ISBN 157958246X.
  16. ^ Goodwin, Elliot H. (1965). The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 8: The American and French Revolutions, 1763–93. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 130. ISBN 9780521045469.
  17. ^ Meyer, Herbert W. (1972). A History of Electricity and Magnetism. Norwalk, Connecticut: Burndy Library. pp. 30–31. ISBN 0-262-13070-X.
  18. ^ Verschuur, Gerrit L. (1993). Hidden Attraction : The History And Mystery Of Magnetism. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 78–79. ISBN 0-19-506488-7.
  19. ^ Darrigol, Olivier (2000). Electrodynamics from Ampère to Einstein. Oxford, [England]: Oxford University Press. pp. 9, 25. ISBN 0-19-850593-0.
  20. ^ Verschuur, Gerrit L. (1993). Hidden Attraction : The History And Mystery Of Magnetism. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 76. ISBN 0-19-506488-7.
  21. ^ Darrigol, Olivier (2000). Electrodynamics from Ampère to Einstein. Oxford, [England]: Oxford University Press. pp. 126–131, 139–144. ISBN 0-19-850593-0.
  22. ^ M.A, J. J. Thomson (1881-04-01). "XXXIII. On the electric and magnetic effects produced by the motion of electrified bodies". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 11 (68): 229–249. doi:10.1080/14786448108627008. ISSN 1941-5982.
  23. ^ Darrigol, Olivier (2000). Electrodynamics from Ampère to Einstein. Oxford, [England]: Oxford University Press. pp. 200, 429–430. ISBN 0-19-850593-0.
  24. ^ Heaviside, Oliver (April 1889). "On the Electromagnetic Effects due to the Motion of Electrification through a Dielectric". Philosophical Magazine: 324.
  25. ^ Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon, Versuch einer Theorie der electrischen und optischen Erscheinungen in bewegten Körpern, 1895.
  26. ^ Darrigol, Olivier (2000). Electrodynamics from Ampère to Einstein. Oxford, [England]: Oxford University Press. p. 327. ISBN 0-19-850593-0.
  27. ^ Whittaker, E. T. (1910). A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity: From the Age of Descartes to the Close of the Nineteenth Century. Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 420–423. ISBN 1-143-01208-9.
  28. ^ See Griffiths, page 326, which states that Maxwell's equations, "together with the [Lorentz] force law...summarize the entire theoretical content of classical electrodynamics".
  29. ^ "Physics Experiments". www.physicsexperiment.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
  30. ^ a b See Griffiths, pages 301–3.
  31. ^ Tai L. Chow (2006). Electromagnetic theory. Sudbury MA: Jones and Bartlett. p. 395. ISBN 0-7637-3827-1.
  32. ^ a b Landau, L. D., Lifshitz, E. M., & Pitaevskiĭ, L. P. (1984). Electrodynamics of continuous media; Volume 8 Course of Theoretical Physics (Second ed.). Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. p. §63 (§49 pp. 205–207 in 1960 edition). ISBN 0-7506-2634-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ Roger F. Harrington (2003). Introduction to electromagnetic engineering. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. p. 56. ISBN 0-486-43241-6.
  34. ^ M N O Sadiku (2007). Elements of electromagnetics (Fourth ed.). NY/Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 391. ISBN 978-0-19-530048-2.
  35. ^ Classical Mechanics (2nd Edition), T.W.B. Kibble, European Physics Series, McGraw Hill (UK), 1973, ISBN 0-07-084018-0.
  36. ^ Lanczos, Cornelius, 1893-1974. (January 1986). The variational principles of mechanics (Fourth ed.). New York. ISBN 0-486-65067-7. OCLC 12949728.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  37. ^ Jackson, J.D. Chapter 11
  38. ^ Hestenes, David. "SpaceTime Calculus".

References

The numbered references refer in part to the list immediately below.

  • Feynman, Richard Phillips; Leighton, Robert B.; Sands, Matthew L. (2006). The Feynman lectures on physics (3 vol.). Pearson / Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-9047-2.: volume 2.
  • Griffiths, David J. (1999). Introduction to electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, [NJ.]: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-805326-X.
  • Jackson, John David (1999). Classical electrodynamics (3rd ed.). New York, [NY.]: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-30932-X.
  • Serway, Raymond A.; Jewett, John W. Jr. (2004). Physics for scientists and engineers, with modern physics. Belmont, [CA.]: Thomson Brooks/Cole. ISBN 0-534-40846-X.
  • Srednicki, Mark A. (2007). Quantum field theory. Cambridge, [England] ; New York [NY.]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-86449-7.

External links

  • Notes from Physics and Astronomy HyperPhysics at Georgia State University; see also home page
  • Interactive Java applet on the magnetic deflection of a particle beam in a homogeneous magnetic field 2011-08-13 at the Wayback Machine by Wolfgang Bauer
  • The Lorentz force formula on a wall directly opposite Lorentz's home in downtown Leiden 2020-10-17 at the Wayback Machine

lorentz, force, physics, specifically, electromagnetism, electromagnetic, force, combination, electric, magnetic, force, point, charge, electromagnetic, fields, particle, charge, moving, with, velocity, electric, field, magnetic, field, experiences, force, act. In physics specifically in electromagnetism the Lorentz force or electromagnetic force is the combination of electric and magnetic force on a point charge due to electromagnetic fields A particle of charge q moving with a velocity v in an electric field E and a magnetic field B experiences a force ofLorentz force acting on fast moving charged particles in a bubble chamber Positive and negative charge trajectories curve in opposite directions F q E q v B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E q mathbf v times mathbf B in SI units 1 2 It says that the electromagnetic force on a charge q is a combination of a force in the direction of the electric field E proportional to the magnitude of the field and the quantity of charge and a force at right angles to the magnetic field B and the velocity v of the charge proportional to the magnitude of the field the charge and the velocity Variations on this basic formula describe the magnetic force on a current carrying wire sometimes called Laplace force the electromotive force in a wire loop moving through a magnetic field an aspect of Faraday s law of induction and the force on a moving charged particle Historians suggest that the law is implicit in a paper by James Clerk Maxwell published in 1865 3 Hendrik Lorentz arrived at a complete derivation in 1895 4 identifying the contribution of the electric force a few years after Oliver Heaviside correctly identified the contribution of the magnetic force 5 Contents 1 Lorentz force law as the definition of E and B 2 Equation 2 1 Charged particle 2 2 Continuous charge distribution 2 3 Equation in cgs units 3 History 4 Trajectories of particles due to the Lorentz force 5 Significance of the Lorentz force 6 Force on a current carrying wire 7 EMF 8 Lorentz force and Faraday s law of induction 9 Lorentz force in terms of potentials 10 Lorentz force and analytical mechanics 11 Relativistic form of the Lorentz force 11 1 Covariant form of the Lorentz force 11 1 1 Field tensor 11 1 2 Translation to vector notation 11 2 Lorentz force in spacetime algebra STA 11 3 Lorentz force in general relativity 12 Applications 13 See also 14 Footnotes 15 References 16 External linksLorentz force law as the definition of E and B Edit Trajectory of a particle with a positive or negative charge q under the influence of a magnetic field B which is directed perpendicularly out of the screen Beam of electrons moving in a circle due to the presence of a magnetic field Purple light revealing the electron s path in this Teltron tube is created by the electrons colliding with gas molecules Charged particles experiencing the Lorentz force In many textbook treatments of classical electromagnetism the Lorentz force law is used as the definition of the electric and magnetic fields E and B 6 7 8 To be specific the Lorentz force is understood to be the following empirical statement The electromagnetic force F on a test charge at a given point and time is a certain function of its charge q and velocity v which can be parameterized by exactly two vectors E and B in the functional form F q E v B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B This is valid even for particles approaching the speed of light that is magnitude of v v c 9 So the two vector fields E and B are thereby defined throughout space and time and these are called the electric field and magnetic field The fields are defined everywhere in space and time with respect to what force a test charge would receive regardless of whether a charge is present to experience the force As a definition of E and B the Lorentz force is only a definition in principle because a real particle as opposed to the hypothetical test charge of infinitesimally small mass and charge would generate its own finite E and B fields which would alter the electromagnetic force that it experiences 10 In addition if the charge experiences acceleration as if forced into a curved trajectory it emits radiation that causes it to lose kinetic energy See for example Bremsstrahlung and synchrotron light These effects occur through both a direct effect called the radiation reaction force and indirectly by affecting the motion of nearby charges and currents Equation EditCharged particle Edit Lorentz force F on a charged particle of charge q in motion instantaneous velocity v The E field and B field vary in space and time The force F acting on a particle of electric charge q with instantaneous velocity v due to an external electric field E and magnetic field B is given by in SI units 1 11 F q E v B displaystyle mathbf F q left mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B right where is the vector cross product all boldface quantities are vectors In terms of Cartesian components we have F x q E x v y B z v z B y displaystyle F x q left E x v y B z v z B y right F y q E y v z B x v x B z displaystyle F y q left E y v z B x v x B z right F z q E z v x B y v y B x displaystyle F z q left E z v x B y v y B x right In general the electric and magnetic fields are functions of the position and time Therefore explicitly the Lorentz force can be written as F r t r t t q q E r t r t B r t displaystyle mathbf F left mathbf r t dot mathbf r t t q right q left mathbf E mathbf r t dot mathbf r t times mathbf B mathbf r t right in which r is the position vector of the charged particle t is time and the overdot is a time derivative A positively charged particle will be accelerated in the same linear orientation as the E field but will curve perpendicularly to both the instantaneous velocity vector v and the B field according to the right hand rule in detail if the fingers of the right hand are extended to point in the direction of v and are then curled to point in the direction of B then the extended thumb will point in the direction of F The term qE is called the electric force while the term q v B is called the magnetic force 12 According to some definitions the term Lorentz force refers specifically to the formula for the magnetic force 13 with the total electromagnetic force including the electric force given some other nonstandard name This article will not follow this nomenclature In what follows the term Lorentz force will refer to the expression for the total force The magnetic force component of the Lorentz force manifests itself as the force that acts on a current carrying wire in a magnetic field In that context it is also called the Laplace force The Lorentz force is a force exerted by the electromagnetic field on the charged particle that is it is the rate at which linear momentum is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle Associated with it is the power which is the rate at which energy is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle That power isv F q v E displaystyle mathbf v cdot mathbf F q mathbf v cdot mathbf E Notice that the magnetic field does not contribute to the power because the magnetic force is always perpendicular to the velocity of the particle Continuous charge distribution Edit Lorentz force per unit 3 volume f on a continuous charge distribution charge density r in motion The 3 current density J corresponds to the motion of the charge element dq in volume element dV and varies throughout the continuum For a continuous charge distribution in motion the Lorentz force equation becomes d F d q E v B displaystyle mathrm d mathbf F mathrm d q left mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B right where d F displaystyle mathrm d mathbf F is the force on a small piece of the charge distribution with charge d q displaystyle mathrm d q If both sides of this equation are divided by the volume of this small piece of the charge distribution d V displaystyle mathrm d V the result is f r E v B displaystyle mathbf f rho left mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B right where f displaystyle mathbf f is the force density force per unit volume and r displaystyle rho is the charge density charge per unit volume Next the current density corresponding to the motion of the charge continuum is J r v displaystyle mathbf J rho mathbf v so the continuous analogue to the equation is 14 f r E J B displaystyle mathbf f rho mathbf E mathbf J times mathbf B The total force is the volume integral over the charge distribution F r E J B d V displaystyle mathbf F iiint left rho mathbf E mathbf J times mathbf B right mathrm d V By eliminating r displaystyle rho and J displaystyle mathbf J using Maxwell s equations and manipulating using the theorems of vector calculus this form of the equation can be used to derive the Maxwell stress tensor s displaystyle boldsymbol sigma in turn this can be combined with the Poynting vector S displaystyle mathbf S to obtain the electromagnetic stress energy tensor T used in general relativity 14 In terms of s displaystyle boldsymbol sigma and S displaystyle mathbf S another way to write the Lorentz force per unit volume is 14 f s 1 c 2 S t displaystyle mathbf f nabla cdot boldsymbol sigma dfrac 1 c 2 dfrac partial mathbf S partial t where c displaystyle c is the speed of light and denotes the divergence of a tensor field Rather than the amount of charge and its velocity in electric and magnetic fields this equation relates the energy flux flow of energy per unit time per unit distance in the fields to the force exerted on a charge distribution See Covariant formulation of classical electromagnetism for more details The density of power associated with the Lorentz force in a material medium isJ E displaystyle mathbf J cdot mathbf E If we separate the total charge and total current into their free and bound parts we get that the density of the Lorentz force isf r f P E J f M P t B displaystyle mathbf f left rho f nabla cdot mathbf P right mathbf E left mathbf J f nabla times mathbf M frac partial mathbf P partial t right times mathbf B where r f displaystyle rho f is the density of free charge P displaystyle mathbf P is the polarization density J f displaystyle mathbf J f is the density of free current and M displaystyle mathbf M is the magnetization density In this way the Lorentz force can explain the torque applied to a permanent magnet by the magnetic field The density of the associated power is J f M P t E displaystyle left mathbf J f nabla times mathbf M frac partial mathbf P partial t right cdot mathbf E Equation in cgs units Edit The above mentioned formulae use SI units which are the most common In older CGS Gaussian units which are somewhat more common among some theoretical physicists as well as condensed matter experimentalists one has insteadF q G E G v c B G displaystyle mathbf F q mathrm G left mathbf E mathrm G frac mathbf v c times mathbf B mathrm G right where c is the speed of light Although this equation looks slightly different it is equivalent since one has the following relations 1 q G q S I 4 p e 0 E G 4 p e 0 E S I B G 4 p m 0 B S I c 1 e 0 m 0 displaystyle q mathrm G frac q mathrm SI sqrt 4 pi varepsilon 0 quad mathbf E mathrm G sqrt 4 pi varepsilon 0 mathbf E mathrm SI quad mathbf B mathrm G sqrt 4 pi mu 0 mathbf B mathrm SI quad c frac 1 sqrt varepsilon 0 mu 0 where e0 is the vacuum permittivity and m0 the vacuum permeability In practice the subscripts G and SI are omitted and the unit system must be determined from context History Edit Lorentz theory of electrons Formulas for the Lorentz force I ponderomotive force and the Maxwell equations for the divergence of the electrical field E II and the magnetic field B III La theorie electromagnetique de Maxwell et son application aux corps mouvants 1892 p 451 V is the velocity of light Early attempts to quantitatively describe the electromagnetic force were made in the mid 18th century It was proposed that the force on magnetic poles by Johann Tobias Mayer and others in 1760 15 and electrically charged objects by Henry Cavendish in 1762 16 obeyed an inverse square law However in both cases the experimental proof was neither complete nor conclusive It was not until 1784 when Charles Augustin de Coulomb using a torsion balance was able to definitively show through experiment that this was true 17 Soon after the discovery in 1820 by Hans Christian Orsted that a magnetic needle is acted on by a voltaic current Andre Marie Ampere that same year was able to devise through experimentation the formula for the angular dependence of the force between two current elements 18 19 In all these descriptions the force was always described in terms of the properties of the matter involved and the distances between two masses or charges rather than in terms of electric and magnetic fields 20 The modern concept of electric and magnetic fields first arose in the theories of Michael Faraday particularly his idea of lines of force later to be given full mathematical description by Lord Kelvin and James Clerk Maxwell 21 From a modern perspective it is possible to identify in Maxwell s 1865 formulation of his field equations a form of the Lorentz force equation in relation to electric currents 3 although in the time of Maxwell it was not evident how his equations related to the forces on moving charged objects J J Thomson was the first to attempt to derive from Maxwell s field equations the electromagnetic forces on a moving charged object in terms of the object s properties and external fields Interested in determining the electromagnetic behavior of the charged particles in cathode rays Thomson published a paper in 1881 wherein he gave the force on the particles due to an external magnetic field as 5 22 F q 2 v B displaystyle mathbf F frac q 2 mathbf v times mathbf B Thomson derived the correct basic form of the formula but because of some miscalculations and an incomplete description of the displacement current included an incorrect scale factor of a half in front of the formula Oliver Heaviside invented the modern vector notation and applied it to Maxwell s field equations he also in 1885 and 1889 had fixed the mistakes of Thomson s derivation and arrived at the correct form of the magnetic force on a moving charged object 5 23 24 Finally in 1895 4 25 Hendrik Lorentz derived the modern form of the formula for the electromagnetic force which includes the contributions to the total force from both the electric and the magnetic fields Lorentz began by abandoning the Maxwellian descriptions of the ether and conduction Instead Lorentz made a distinction between matter and the luminiferous aether and sought to apply the Maxwell equations at a microscopic scale Using Heaviside s version of the Maxwell equations for a stationary ether and applying Lagrangian mechanics see below Lorentz arrived at the correct and complete form of the force law that now bears his name 26 27 Trajectories of particles due to the Lorentz force EditMain article Guiding center Charged particle drifts in a homogeneous magnetic field A No disturbing force B With an electric field E C With an independent force F e g gravity D In an inhomogeneous magnetic field grad H In many cases of practical interest the motion in a magnetic field of an electrically charged particle such as an electron or ion in a plasma can be treated as the superposition of a relatively fast circular motion around a point called the guiding center and a relatively slow drift of this point The drift speeds may differ for various species depending on their charge states masses or temperatures possibly resulting in electric currents or chemical separation Significance of the Lorentz force EditWhile the modern Maxwell s equations describe how electrically charged particles and currents or moving charged particles give rise to electric and magnetic fields the Lorentz force law completes that picture by describing the force acting on a moving point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields 11 28 The Lorentz force law describes the effect of E and B upon a point charge but such electromagnetic forces are not the entire picture Charged particles are possibly coupled to other forces notably gravity and nuclear forces Thus Maxwell s equations do not stand separate from other physical laws but are coupled to them via the charge and current densities The response of a point charge to the Lorentz law is one aspect the generation of E and B by currents and charges is another In real materials the Lorentz force is inadequate to describe the collective behavior of charged particles both in principle and as a matter of computation The charged particles in a material medium not only respond to the E and B fields but also generate these fields Complex transport equations must be solved to determine the time and spatial response of charges for example the Boltzmann equation or the Fokker Planck equation or the Navier Stokes equations For example see magnetohydrodynamics fluid dynamics electrohydrodynamics superconductivity stellar evolution An entire physical apparatus for dealing with these matters has developed See for example Green Kubo relations and Green s function many body theory Force on a current carrying wire Edit Right hand rule for a current carrying wire in a magnetic field B When a wire carrying an electric current is placed in a magnetic field each of the moving charges which comprise the current experiences the Lorentz force and together they can create a macroscopic force on the wire sometimes called the Laplace force By combining the Lorentz force law above with the definition of electric current the following equation results in the case of a straight stationary wire 29 F I ℓ B displaystyle mathbf F I boldsymbol ell times mathbf B where ℓ is a vector whose magnitude is the length of wire and whose direction is along the wire aligned with the direction of conventional current charge flow I If the wire is not straight but curved the force on it can be computed by applying this formula to each infinitesimal segment of wire d ℓ displaystyle mathrm d boldsymbol ell then adding up all these forces by integration Formally the net force on a stationary rigid wire carrying a steady current I isF I d ℓ B displaystyle mathbf F I int mathrm d boldsymbol ell times mathbf B This is the net force In addition there will usually be torque plus other effects if the wire is not perfectly rigid One application of this is Ampere s force law which describes how two current carrying wires can attract or repel each other since each experiences a Lorentz force from the other s magnetic field For more information see the article Ampere s force law EMF EditThe magnetic force qv B component of the Lorentz force is responsible for motional electromotive force or motional EMF the phenomenon underlying many electrical generators When a conductor is moved through a magnetic field the magnetic field exerts opposite forces on electrons and nuclei in the wire and this creates the EMF The term motional EMF is applied to this phenomenon since the EMF is due to the motion of the wire In other electrical generators the magnets move while the conductors do not In this case the EMF is due to the electric force qE term in the Lorentz Force equation The electric field in question is created by the changing magnetic field resulting in an induced EMF as described by the Maxwell Faraday equation one of the four modern Maxwell s equations 30 Both of these EMFs despite their apparently distinct origins are described by the same equation namely the EMF is the rate of change of magnetic flux through the wire This is Faraday s law of induction see below Einstein s special theory of relativity was partially motivated by the desire to better understand this link between the two effects 30 In fact the electric and magnetic fields are different facets of the same electromagnetic field and in moving from one inertial frame to another the solenoidal vector field portion of the E field can change in whole or in part to a B field or vice versa 31 Lorentz force and Faraday s law of induction Edit Lorentz force image on a wall in Leiden Main article Faraday s law of induction Given a loop of wire in a magnetic field Faraday s law of induction states the induced electromotive force EMF in the wire is E d F B d t displaystyle mathcal E frac mathrm d Phi B mathrm d t where F B S t d A B r t displaystyle Phi B iint Sigma t mathrm d mathbf A cdot mathbf B mathbf r t is the magnetic flux through the loop B is the magnetic field S t is a surface bounded by the closed contour S t at time t dA is an infinitesimal vector area element of S t magnitude is the area of an infinitesimal patch of surface direction is orthogonal to that surface patch The sign of the EMF is determined by Lenz s law Note that this is valid for not only a stationary wire but also for a moving wire From Faraday s law of induction that is valid for a moving wire for instance in a motor and the Maxwell Equations the Lorentz Force can be deduced The reverse is also true the Lorentz force and the Maxwell Equations can be used to derive the Faraday Law Let S t be the moving wire moving together without rotation and with constant velocity v and S t be the internal surface of the wire The EMF around the closed path S t is given by 32 E S t d ℓ F q displaystyle mathcal E oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf F q whereE F q displaystyle mathbf E mathbf F q is the electric field and dℓ is an infinitesimal vector element of the contour S t NB Both dℓ and dA have a sign ambiguity to get the correct sign the right hand rule is used as explained in the article Kelvin Stokes theorem The above result can be compared with the version of Faraday s law of induction that appears in the modern Maxwell s equations called here the Maxwell Faraday equation E B t displaystyle nabla times mathbf E frac partial mathbf B partial t The Maxwell Faraday equation also can be written in an integral form using the Kelvin Stokes theorem 33 So we have the Maxwell Faraday equation S t d ℓ E r t S t d A d B r t d t displaystyle oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf E mathbf r t iint Sigma t mathrm d mathbf A cdot mathrm d mathbf B mathbf r t over mathrm d t and the Faraday Law S t d ℓ F q r t d d t S t d A B r t displaystyle oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf F q mathbf r t frac mathrm d mathrm d t iint Sigma t mathrm d mathbf A cdot mathbf B mathbf r t The two are equivalent if the wire is not moving Using the Leibniz integral rule and that div B 0 results in S t d ℓ F q r t S t d A t B r t S t v B d ℓ displaystyle oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf F q mathbf r t iint Sigma t mathrm d mathbf A cdot frac partial partial t mathbf B mathbf r t oint partial Sigma t mathbf v times mathbf B mathrm d boldsymbol ell and using the Maxwell Faraday equation S t d ℓ F q r t S t d ℓ E r t S t v B r t d ℓ displaystyle oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf F q mathbf r t oint partial Sigma t mathrm d boldsymbol ell cdot mathbf E mathbf r t oint partial Sigma t mathbf v times mathbf B mathbf r t mathrm d boldsymbol ell since this is valid for any wire position it implies that F q E r t q v B r t displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E mathbf r t q mathbf v times mathbf B mathbf r t Faraday s law of induction holds whether the loop of wire is rigid and stationary or in motion or in process of deformation and it holds whether the magnetic field is constant in time or changing However there are cases where Faraday s law is either inadequate or difficult to use and application of the underlying Lorentz force law is necessary See inapplicability of Faraday s law If the magnetic field is fixed in time and the conducting loop moves through the field the magnetic flux FB linking the loop can change in several ways For example if the B field varies with position and the loop moves to a location with different B field FB will change Alternatively if the loop changes orientation with respect to the B field the B dA differential element will change because of the different angle between B and dA also changing FB As a third example if a portion of the circuit is swept through a uniform time independent B field and another portion of the circuit is held stationary the flux linking the entire closed circuit can change due to the shift in relative position of the circuit s component parts with time surface S t time dependent In all three cases Faraday s law of induction then predicts the EMF generated by the change in FB Note that the Maxwell Faraday s equation implies that the Electric Field E is non conservative when the Magnetic Field B varies in time and is not expressible as the gradient of a scalar field and not subject to the gradient theorem since its rotational is not zero 32 34 Lorentz force in terms of potentials EditSee also Mathematical descriptions of the electromagnetic field Maxwell s equations and Helmholtz decomposition The E and B fields can be replaced by the magnetic vector potential A and scalar electrostatic potential ϕ byE ϕ A t displaystyle mathbf E nabla phi frac partial mathbf A partial t B A displaystyle mathbf B nabla times mathbf A where is the gradient is the divergence and is the curl The force becomesF q ϕ A t v A displaystyle mathbf F q left nabla phi frac partial mathbf A partial t mathbf v times nabla times mathbf A right Using an identity for the triple product this can be rewritten as F q ϕ A t v A v A displaystyle mathbf F q left nabla phi frac partial mathbf A partial t nabla left mathbf v cdot mathbf A right left mathbf v cdot nabla right mathbf A right Notice that the coordinates and the velocity components should be treated as independent variables so the del operator acts only on A displaystyle mathbf A not on v displaystyle mathbf v thus there is no need of using Feynman s subscript notation in the equation above Using the chain rule the total derivative of A displaystyle mathbf A is d A d t A t v A displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf A mathrm d t frac partial mathbf A partial t mathbf v cdot nabla mathbf A so that the above expression becomes F q ϕ v A d A d t displaystyle mathbf F q left nabla phi mathbf v cdot mathbf A frac mathrm d mathbf A mathrm d t right With v ẋ we can put the equation into the convenient Euler Lagrange form F q x ϕ x A d d t x ϕ x A displaystyle mathbf F q left nabla mathbf x phi dot mathbf x cdot mathbf A frac mathrm d mathrm d t nabla dot mathbf x phi dot mathbf x cdot mathbf A right where x x x y y z z displaystyle nabla mathbf x hat x dfrac partial partial x hat y dfrac partial partial y hat z dfrac partial partial z and x x x y y z z displaystyle nabla dot mathbf x hat x dfrac partial partial dot x hat y dfrac partial partial dot y hat z dfrac partial partial dot z Lorentz force and analytical mechanics EditSee also Momentum The Lagrangian for a charged particle of mass m and charge q in an electromagnetic field equivalently describes the dynamics of the particle in terms of its energy rather than the force exerted on it The classical expression is given by 35 L m 2 r r q A r q ϕ displaystyle L frac m 2 mathbf dot r cdot mathbf dot r q mathbf A cdot mathbf dot r q phi where A and ϕ are the potential fields as above The quantity V q ϕ A r displaystyle V q phi mathbf A cdot mathbf dot r can be thought as a velocity dependent potential function 36 Using Lagrange s equations the equation for the Lorentz force given above can be obtained again Derivation of Lorentz force from classical Lagrangian SI units For an A field a particle moving with velocity v ṙ has potential momentum q A r t displaystyle q mathbf A mathbf r t so its potential energy is q A r t r displaystyle q mathbf A mathbf r t cdot mathbf dot r For a ϕ field the particle s potential energy is q ϕ r t displaystyle q phi mathbf r t The total potential energy is then V q ϕ q A r displaystyle V q phi q mathbf A cdot mathbf dot r and the kinetic energy is T m 2 r r displaystyle T frac m 2 mathbf dot r cdot mathbf dot r hence the Lagrangian L T V m 2 r r q A r q ϕ displaystyle L T V frac m 2 mathbf dot r cdot mathbf dot r q mathbf A cdot mathbf dot r q phi L m 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 q x A x y A y z A z q ϕ displaystyle L frac m 2 dot x 2 dot y 2 dot z 2 q dot x A x dot y A y dot z A z q phi Lagrange s equations ared d t L x L x displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d t frac partial L partial dot x frac partial L partial x same for y and z So calculating the partial derivatives d d t L x m x q d A x d t m x q d t A x t d t A x x d x A x y d y A x z d z m x q A x t A x x x A x y y A x z z displaystyle begin aligned frac mathrm d mathrm d t frac partial L partial dot x amp m ddot x q frac mathrm d A x mathrm d t amp m ddot x frac q mathrm d t left frac partial A x partial t dt frac partial A x partial x dx frac partial A x partial y dy frac partial A x partial z dz right amp m ddot x q left frac partial A x partial t frac partial A x partial x dot x frac partial A x partial y dot y frac partial A x partial z dot z right end aligned L x q ϕ x q A x x x A y x y A z x z displaystyle frac partial L partial x q frac partial phi partial x q left frac partial A x partial x dot x frac partial A y partial x dot y frac partial A z partial x dot z right equating and simplifying m x q A x t A x x x A x y y A x z z q ϕ x q A x x x A y x y A z x z displaystyle m ddot x q left frac partial A x partial t frac partial A x partial x dot x frac partial A x partial y dot y frac partial A x partial z dot z right q frac partial phi partial x q left frac partial A x partial x dot x frac partial A y partial x dot y frac partial A z partial x dot z right F x q ϕ x A x t q y A y x A x y z A z x A x z q E x q y A z z A y q E x q r A x q E x q r B x displaystyle begin aligned F x amp q left frac partial phi partial x frac partial A x partial t right q left dot y left frac partial A y partial x frac partial A x partial y right dot z left frac partial A z partial x frac partial A x partial z right right amp qE x q dot y nabla times mathbf A z dot z nabla times mathbf A y amp qE x q mathbf dot r times nabla times mathbf A x amp qE x q mathbf dot r times mathbf B x end aligned and similarly for the y and z directions Hence the force equation is F q E r B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E mathbf dot r times mathbf B The potential energy depends on the velocity of the particle so the force is velocity dependent so it is not conservative The relativistic Lagrangian isL m c 2 1 r c 2 q A r r q ϕ r displaystyle L mc 2 sqrt 1 left frac dot mathbf r c right 2 q mathbf A mathbf r cdot dot mathbf r q phi mathbf r The action is the relativistic arclength of the path of the particle in spacetime minus the potential energy contribution plus an extra contribution which quantum mechanically is an extra phase a charged particle gets when it is moving along a vector potential Derivation of Lorentz force from relativistic Lagrangian SI units The equations of motion derived by extremizing the action see matrix calculus for the notation d P d t L r q A r r q ϕ r displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf P mathrm d t frac partial L partial mathbf r q partial mathbf A over partial mathbf r cdot dot mathbf r q partial phi over partial mathbf r P q A m r 1 r c 2 displaystyle mathbf P q mathbf A frac m dot mathbf r sqrt 1 left frac dot mathbf r c right 2 are the same as Hamilton s equations of motion d r d t p P q A 2 m c 2 2 q ϕ displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d t frac partial partial mathbf p left sqrt mathbf P q mathbf A 2 mc 2 2 q phi right d p d t r P q A 2 m c 2 2 q ϕ displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf p mathrm d t partial over partial mathbf r left sqrt mathbf P q mathbf A 2 mc 2 2 q phi right both are equivalent to the noncanonical form d d t m r 1 r c 2 q E r B displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d t left m dot mathbf r over sqrt 1 left frac dot mathbf r c right 2 right q left mathbf E dot mathbf r times mathbf B right This formula is the Lorentz force representing the rate at which the EM field adds relativistic momentum to the particle Relativistic form of the Lorentz force EditCovariant form of the Lorentz force Edit Field tensor Edit Main articles Covariant formulation of classical electromagnetism and Mathematical descriptions of the electromagnetic field Using the metric signature 1 1 1 1 the Lorentz force for a charge q can be written in 37 covariant form d p a d t q F a b U b displaystyle frac mathrm d p alpha mathrm d tau qF alpha beta U beta where pa is the four momentum defined asp a p 0 p 1 p 2 p 3 g m c p x p y p z displaystyle p alpha left p 0 p 1 p 2 p 3 right left gamma mc p x p y p z right t the proper time of the particle Fab the contravariant electromagnetic tensorF a b 0 E x c E y c E z c E x c 0 B z B y E y c B z 0 B x E z c B y B x 0 displaystyle F alpha beta begin pmatrix 0 amp E x c amp E y c amp E z c E x c amp 0 amp B z amp B y E y c amp B z amp 0 amp B x E z c amp B y amp B x amp 0 end pmatrix and U is the covariant 4 velocity of the particle defined as U b U 0 U 1 U 2 U 3 g c v x v y v z displaystyle U beta left U 0 U 1 U 2 U 3 right gamma left c v x v y v z right in which g v 1 1 v 2 c 2 1 1 v x 2 v y 2 v z 2 c 2 displaystyle gamma v frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v x 2 v y 2 v z 2 c 2 is the Lorentz factor The fields are transformed to a frame moving with constant relative velocity by F m n L m a L n b F a b displaystyle F mu nu Lambda mu alpha Lambda nu beta F alpha beta where Lma is the Lorentz transformation tensor Translation to vector notation Edit The a 1 component x component of the force isd p 1 d t q U b F 1 b q U 0 F 10 U 1 F 11 U 2 F 12 U 3 F 13 displaystyle frac mathrm d p 1 mathrm d tau qU beta F 1 beta q left U 0 F 10 U 1 F 11 U 2 F 12 U 3 F 13 right Substituting the components of the covariant electromagnetic tensor F yieldsd p 1 d t q U 0 E x c U 2 B z U 3 B y displaystyle frac mathrm d p 1 mathrm d tau q left U 0 left frac E x c right U 2 B z U 3 B y right Using the components of covariant four velocity yieldsd p 1 d t q g c E x c v y B z v z B y q g E x v y B z v z B y q g E x v B x displaystyle frac mathrm d p 1 mathrm d tau q gamma left c left frac E x c right v y B z v z B y right q gamma left E x v y B z v z B y right q gamma left E x left mathbf v times mathbf B right x right The calculation for a 2 3 force components in the y and z directions yields similar results so collecting the 3 equations into one d p d t q g E v B displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf p mathrm d tau q gamma left mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B right and since differentials in coordinate time dt and proper time dt are related by the Lorentz factor d t g v d t displaystyle dt gamma v d tau so we arrive at d p d t q E v B displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf p mathrm d t q left mathbf E mathbf v times mathbf B right This is precisely the Lorentz force law however it is important to note that p is the relativistic expression p g v m 0 v displaystyle mathbf p gamma v m 0 mathbf v Lorentz force in spacetime algebra STA Edit The electric and magnetic fields are dependent on the velocity of an observer so the relativistic form of the Lorentz force law can best be exhibited starting from a coordinate independent expression for the electromagnetic and magnetic fields F displaystyle mathcal F and an arbitrary time direction g 0 displaystyle gamma 0 This can be settled through Space Time Algebra or the geometric algebra of space time a type of Clifford algebra defined on a pseudo Euclidean space 38 asE F g 0 g 0 displaystyle mathbf E left mathcal F cdot gamma 0 right gamma 0 and i B F g 0 g 0 displaystyle i mathbf B left mathcal F wedge gamma 0 right gamma 0 F displaystyle mathcal F is a space time bivector an oriented plane segment just like a vector is an oriented line segment which has six degrees of freedom corresponding to boosts rotations in space time planes and rotations rotations in space space planes The dot product with the vector g 0 displaystyle gamma 0 pulls a vector in the space algebra from the translational part while the wedge product creates a trivector in the space algebra who is dual to a vector which is the usual magnetic field vector The relativistic velocity is given by the time like changes in a time position vector v x displaystyle v dot x where v 2 1 displaystyle v 2 1 which shows our choice for the metric and the velocity is v c v g 0 v g 0 displaystyle mathbf v cv wedge gamma 0 v cdot gamma 0 The proper invariant is an inadequate term because no transformation has been defined form of the Lorentz force law is simply F q F v displaystyle F q mathcal F cdot v Note that the order is important because between a bivector and a vector the dot product is anti symmetric Upon a spacetime split like one can obtain the velocity and fields as above yielding the usual expression Lorentz force in general relativity Edit In the general theory of relativity the equation of motion for a particle with mass m displaystyle m and charge e displaystyle e moving in a space with metric tensor g a b displaystyle g ab and electromagnetic field F a b displaystyle F ab is given asm d u c d s m 1 2 g a b c u a u b e F c b u b displaystyle m frac du c ds m frac 1 2 g ab c u a u b eF cb u b where u a d x a d s displaystyle u a dx a ds d x a displaystyle dx a is taken along the trajectory g a b c g a b x c displaystyle g ab c partial g ab partial x c and d s 2 g a b d x a d x b displaystyle ds 2 g ab dx a dx b The equation can also be written asm d u c d s m G a b c u a u b e F c b u b displaystyle m frac du c ds m Gamma abc u a u b eF cb u b where G a b c displaystyle Gamma abc is the Christoffel symbol of the torsion free metric connection in general relativity or as m D u c d s e F c b u b displaystyle m frac Du c ds eF cb u b where D displaystyle D is the covariant differential in general relativity metric torsion free Applications EditThe Lorentz force occurs in many devices including Cyclotrons and other circular path particle accelerators Mass spectrometers Velocity Filters Magnetrons Lorentz force velocimetryIn its manifestation as the Laplace force on an electric current in a conductor this force occurs in many devices including Electric motors Railguns Linear motors Loudspeakers Magnetoplasmadynamic thrusters Electrical generators Homopolar generators Linear alternatorsSee also EditHall effect Electromagnetism Gravitomagnetism Ampere s force law Hendrik Lorentz Maxwell s equations Formulation of Maxwell s equations in special relativity Moving magnet and conductor problem Abraham Lorentz force Larmor formula Cyclotron radiation Magnetoresistance Scalar potential Helmholtz decomposition Guiding center Field line Coulomb s law Electromagnetic buoyancyFootnotes Edit a b c In SI units B is measured in teslas symbol T In Gaussian cgs units B is measured in gauss symbol G See e g Geomagnetism Frequently Asked Questions National Geophysical Data Center Retrieved 21 October 2013 The H field is measured in amperes per metre A m in SI units and in oersteds Oe in cgs units International system of units SI NIST reference on constants units and uncertainty National Institute of Standards and Technology Retrieved 9 May 2012 a b Huray Paul G 2010 Maxwell s Equations Wiley IEEE p 22 ISBN 978 0 470 54276 7 a b Per F Dahl Flash of the Cathode Rays A History of J J Thomson s Electron CRC Press 1997 p 10 a b c Paul J Nahin Oliver Heaviside JHU Press 2002 See for example Jackson pp 777 8 J A Wheeler C Misner K S Thorne 1973 Gravitation W H Freeman amp Co pp 72 73 ISBN 0 7167 0344 0 These authors use the Lorentz force in tensor form as definer of the electromagnetic tensor F in turn the fields E and B I S Grant W R Phillips Manchester Physics 1990 Electromagnetism 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons p 122 ISBN 978 0 471 92712 9 I S Grant W R Phillips Manchester Physics 1990 Electromagnetism 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons p 123 ISBN 978 0 471 92712 9 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol II Ch 1 Electromagnetism www feynmanlectures caltech edu Retrieved 2022 07 06 a b See Jackson page 2 The book lists the four modern Maxwell s equations and then states Also essential for consideration of charged particle motion is the Lorentz force equation F q E v B which gives the force acting on a point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields See Griffiths page 204 For example see the website of the Lorentz Institute or Griffiths a b c Griffiths David J 1999 Introduction to electrodynamics reprint with corr 3rd ed Upper Saddle River New Jersey u a Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 805326 0 Delon Michel 2001 Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment Chicago IL Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers p 538 ISBN 157958246X Goodwin Elliot H 1965 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 8 The American and French Revolutions 1763 93 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 130 ISBN 9780521045469 Meyer Herbert W 1972 A History of Electricity and Magnetism Norwalk Connecticut Burndy Library pp 30 31 ISBN 0 262 13070 X Verschuur Gerrit L 1993 Hidden Attraction The History And Mystery Of Magnetism New York Oxford University Press pp 78 79 ISBN 0 19 506488 7 Darrigol Olivier 2000 Electrodynamics from Ampere to Einstein Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 9 25 ISBN 0 19 850593 0 Verschuur Gerrit L 1993 Hidden Attraction The History And Mystery Of Magnetism New York Oxford University Press p 76 ISBN 0 19 506488 7 Darrigol Olivier 2000 Electrodynamics from Ampere to Einstein Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 126 131 139 144 ISBN 0 19 850593 0 M A J J Thomson 1881 04 01 XXXIII On the electric and magnetic effects produced by the motion of electrified bodies The London Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 11 68 229 249 doi 10 1080 14786448108627008 ISSN 1941 5982 Darrigol Olivier 2000 Electrodynamics from Ampere to Einstein Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 200 429 430 ISBN 0 19 850593 0 Heaviside Oliver April 1889 On the Electromagnetic Effects due to the Motion of Electrification through a Dielectric Philosophical Magazine 324 Lorentz Hendrik Antoon Versuch einer Theorie der electrischen und optischen Erscheinungen in bewegten Korpern 1895 Darrigol Olivier 2000 Electrodynamics from Ampere to Einstein Oxford England Oxford University Press p 327 ISBN 0 19 850593 0 Whittaker E T 1910 A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity From the Age of Descartes to the Close of the Nineteenth Century Longmans Green and Co pp 420 423 ISBN 1 143 01208 9 See Griffiths page 326 which states that Maxwell s equations together with the Lorentz force law summarize the entire theoretical content of classical electrodynamics Physics Experiments www physicsexperiment co uk Retrieved 2018 08 14 a b See Griffiths pages 301 3 Tai L Chow 2006 Electromagnetic theory Sudbury MA Jones and Bartlett p 395 ISBN 0 7637 3827 1 a b Landau L D Lifshitz E M amp Pitaevskiĭ L P 1984 Electrodynamics of continuous media Volume 8Course of Theoretical Physics Second ed Oxford Butterworth Heinemann p 63 49 pp 205 207 in 1960 edition ISBN 0 7506 2634 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Roger F Harrington 2003 Introduction to electromagnetic engineering Mineola New York Dover Publications p 56 ISBN 0 486 43241 6 M N O Sadiku 2007 Elements of electromagnetics Fourth ed NY Oxford Oxford University Press p 391 ISBN 978 0 19 530048 2 Classical Mechanics 2nd Edition T W B Kibble European Physics Series McGraw Hill UK 1973 ISBN 0 07 084018 0 Lanczos Cornelius 1893 1974 January 1986 The variational principles of mechanics Fourth ed New York ISBN 0 486 65067 7 OCLC 12949728 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jackson J D Chapter 11 Hestenes David SpaceTime Calculus References EditThe numbered references refer in part to the list immediately below Feynman Richard Phillips Leighton Robert B Sands Matthew L 2006 The Feynman lectures on physics 3 vol Pearson Addison Wesley ISBN 0 8053 9047 2 volume 2 Griffiths David J 1999 Introduction to electrodynamics 3rd ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 805326 X Jackson John David 1999 Classical electrodynamics 3rd ed New York NY Wiley ISBN 0 471 30932 X Serway Raymond A Jewett John W Jr 2004 Physics for scientists and engineers with modern physics Belmont CA Thomson Brooks Cole ISBN 0 534 40846 X Srednicki Mark A 2007 Quantum field theory Cambridge England New York NY Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86449 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lorentz force Wikiquote has quotations related to Lorentz force Lorentz force demonstration Faraday s law Tankersley and Mosca Notes from Physics and Astronomy HyperPhysics at Georgia State University see also home page Interactive Java applet on the magnetic deflection of a particle beam in a homogeneous magnetic field Archived 2011 08 13 at the Wayback Machine by Wolfgang Bauer The Lorentz force formula on a wall directly opposite Lorentz s home in downtown Leiden Archived 2020 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lorentz force amp oldid 1131962349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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