nLab electromagnetic radiation

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Context

Physics

physics, mathematical physics, philosophy of physics

Surveys, textbooks and lecture notes


theory (physics), model (physics)

experiment, measurement, computable physics

This entry needs attention.

Contents

Idea

The electromagnetic radiation of some localized body is an electromagnetic field caused by (the dynamics of) that body in the limit of a large distance from that body. See also radiation, electromagnetic waves.

Sometimes one refers to electromagnetic radiation through some medium as simply the presence of an externally caused electromagnetic waves passing through that medium, not specifying any particular source. Sometimes the source of a radiation may be distributed matter in thermal equilibrium (e.g. black body radiation) and the radiation occurs within the medium containing the matter in equilibrium.

Theoretical treatment of a radiation caused by a moving charged and or magnetized body at large distances from the sources involves theoretical issues like multipole expansions, asymptotics of expressions for fields, retarded potentials and so on.

References

Wikipedia says:

Electromagnetic radiation is a particular form of the more general electromagnetic field (EM field), which is produced by moving charges. Electromagnetic radiation is associated with EM fields that are far enough away from the moving charges that produced them, that absorption of the EM radiation no longer affects the behavior of these moving charges. These two types or behaviors of EM field are sometimes referred to as the near and far field. In this language, EMR is merely another name for the far-field.

  • Jackson, Electrodynamics

Last revised on January 26, 2019 at 12:31:41. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.