On the transfer of energy in the electromagnetic field
Author(s) -
John Henry Poynting
Publication year - 1883
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society of london
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2053-9126
pISSN - 0370-1662
DOI - 10.1098/rspl.1883.0096
Subject(s) - conductor , electromagnetic field , physics , energy (signal processing) , faraday cage , point (geometry) , current (fluid) , electrical conductor , electric potential energy , magnetic field , field (mathematics) , electric current , mechanics , classical mechanics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , geometry , pure mathematics , thermodynamics
A space containing electric currents may be regarded as a field where energy is transform ed a t certain points into the electric and magnetic kinds by means of batteries, dynamos, thermoelectric actions, and so on, while in other parts of the field this energy is again transformed into heat, work done by electromagnetic forces, or any form of energy yielded by currents. Formerly a current was regarded as something travelling along a conductor, attention being chiefly directed to the conductor, and the energy which appeared at any part of the circuit, if considered at all, was supposed to be conveyed thither through the conductor by the current. But the existence of induced currents and of electromagnetic actions at a distance from a primary circuit from which they draw their energy, have led us, under the guidance of Faraday and Maxwell, to look upon the medium surrounding the conductor as playing a very important part in the development of the phenomena. If we believe in the continuity of the motion of energy, that is, if we believe that when it disappears at one point and reappears at another, it must have passed through the intervening space, we are forced .to conclude that the surrounding medium contains at least a part of the energy, and that it is capable of transferring it from point to point. Upon this basis Maxwell has investigated what energy is contained in the medium, and. he has given expressions which assign to each art of the field a quantity of energy depending on the electromotive and magnetic intensities, and on the nature of the matter at that part l regard to its specific inductive capacity and magnetic permeability. These expressions account, as far as we know, for the whole energy. According to Maxwell’s theory currents consist essentially in a certain distribution of energy in and around a conductor, accompanied by transformation and consequent movement of energy through the field.
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