z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
PROPAGATION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN NEAR AND FAR ZONES: ACTUALIZED APPROACH WITH NON-ZERO TRACE ELECTRO-MAGNETIC ENERGY-MOMENTUM TENSOR
Author(s) -
Alexander Kholmetskii,
O. Missevitch,
R. Smirnov-Rueda,
Tolga Yarman
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
progress in electromagnetics research m
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1937-8726
DOI - 10.2528/pierm11101407
Subject(s) - trace (psycholinguistics) , zero (linguistics) , physics , tensor (intrinsic definition) , momentum (technical analysis) , energy (signal processing) , stress–energy tensor , electromagnetic field , magnetic field , quantum electrodynamics , classical mechanics , exact solutions in general relativity , quantum mechanics , geometry , mathematics , finance , economics , philosophy , linguistics
The present work is motivated by our recent experimental results [2–4] that indicate on anomalously small retardation of bound (or velocity-dependent) electromagnetic (EM) fields in the near zone of an emitter, whereas in the far zone the retardation tends to the standard value determined by the velocity of light c. Such anomaly is specific only for bound field component, while EM radiation has the constant propagation velocity c in the entire space. One possible explanation of these experimental results can be linked to our earlier finding [6, 8] that conventional EM energy-momentum (EMEM) tensor describes bound and radiative EM fields only in spatial regions free of charges and currents. In this work we show that an additional term has to be included into the standard EMEM tensor in order to make viable the description of the whole system of “charges plus fields”. Such approach to the EMEM tensor actually admits anomalously small retardation of bound EM fields in regions very close to a field source, providing the standard propagation in the far zone. Some special implications are also discussed. Received 14 October 2011, Accepted 24 November 2011, Scheduled 30 November 2011 * Corresponding author: Smirnov-Rueda (smirnov@mat.ucm.es). 58 Kholmetskii et al.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom