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In vacuum the curl is zero. If there is not vacuum, the divergence of E will not be zero.
If there's a current density but no net charge density, will the divergence of E be zero?Orodruin said:In vacuum the curl is zero. If there is not vacuum, the divergence of E will not be zero.
No, but in the case described here there is no net charge density in the unprimed frame so since there is a current in the unprimed frame there will be a net charge density in the primed frame.tade said:If there's a current density but no net charge density, will the divergence of E be zero?
hmm, Einstein used this moving magnet and conductor problem as an introduction to his original paper on special relativity.Orodruin said:No, but in the case described here there is no net charge density in the unprimed frame so since there is a current in the unprimed frame there will be a net charge density in the primed frame.
vanhees71 said:I must say, I lost track of what's the issue discussed here, and to say it friendly, the Wikipedia in this case is pretty incomplete
Orodruin said:$$
\nabla \times \vec E' = \nabla \times (\vec v \times \vec B) = \vec v (\nabla \cdot \vec B) - (\vec v \cdot \nabla) \vec B = - (\vec v \cdot \nabla) \vec B,
$$
because the magnetic field is divergence free. Thus ##\vec E' = \vec v \times \vec B## solves the Maxwell-Faraday equation.
Before relativity, Heinrich Hertz, among others, tackled the problem and came pretty close to the modern relativistic view, but it's pretty difficult to understand compared to the very clear solution of all the problems concerning "electrodynamics of moving bodies" within the completed (special) theory of relativity, which is due to Minkowski.tade said:I was asking Oroduin how physicists had established the mathematics of the moving magnet and conductor problem before relativity.
vanhees71 said:Before relativity, Heinrich Hertz, among others, tackled the problem and came pretty close to the modern relativistic view