- Field equation
A field equation is an equation in a
physical theory that describes how afundamental force (or a combination of such forces) interacts withmatter . The four fundamental forces are thegravitational force , theelectromagnetic force , thestrong force and theweak force .Before the theory of
quantum mechanics was fully developed, there were two known field theories, namelygravitation andelectromagnetism (these two are sometimes referred to asclassical field theories , as they were formulated before the advent of quantum mechanics, and hence do not take into account quantum phenomena).Modern field equations tend to be
tensor equation s.Newton's theory of universal gravitation
The first field theory of gravity was
Newton's theory of gravitation , which described gravity as obeying an inverse square law. This was very useful in describing the motion of planets around the Sun.The gravitational field at the point r due to several masses, Mi, located at points, ri, is given by
:
where Gc is Newton's
gravitational constant . Note that the direction of the field points from the position, r, to the position of the masses, ri; this is ensured by the minus sign. In a nutshell, this means all masses attract.Poisson's equation
The term "potential theory" arises from the fact that, in 19th century physics, the fundamental forces of nature were believed to be derived from potentials which satisfied Laplace's equation. Poisson addressed the question of the stability of the planetary orbits, which had already been settled by Lagrange to the first degree of approximation for the disturbing forces and created
Poisson's equation ::
To understand where this equation comes from, we need to examine the form and source of the force fields. We recognise that charges are the sources and sinks of electrostatic fields: positive charges emanate electric field lines, and field lines terminate at negative charges. Similarly, in Newton's gravitation masses are the sources of the field so that field lines terminate at objects that have mass. Formalised
Gauss' Law for electric fields (using the more generaldivergence theorem )::
and for masses
:
where ρe and ρm represents the charge and mass densities respectively. Incidentally, this similarity arises from the similarity of the form of
Newton's law of gravitation andCoulomb's law .Since the force fields are related to their potentials by the gradient:
:
we can substitute the potential for the field to get
Poisson's equation ::
:
Laplace's equation
In the case where there is no source term (e.g. vacuum, or paired charges), these potentials obey
Laplace's equation ::
Relativistic fields
When it was realised that
Lorentz invariance is an essential feature of nature, it became desirable to model everything as a relativistic field. This could be conveniently done under the formalism of relativistic (or covariant) classical field theory.This works by finding a Lorentz scalar, the
Lagrangian density , from which the field equations and symmetries can be readily derived.A scalar particle with non-zero mass
:
This is the familiar
Klein–Gordon equation in the four dimensions of space and velocity.Maxwell's equations
The electromagnetic force is best described by
Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism . The field equations ofclassical electromagnetism are Maxwell's equations which describe how electromagnetic fields are produced from charged particles and are written in the framework ofspecial relativity (which was devised to consistently describe electromagnetism andclassical mechanics ) as::
This arises from the following Lagrangian
:
Einstein's field equation
Newtonian gravitation is now superseded by Einstein's theory of
general relativity , in whichgravitation is thought of as being due to a curvedspacetime , caused by masses. The Einstein field equation - which describes how this curvature is produced by masses - is::
The vacuum solution can be obtained by varying the following action with respect to the metric
:
Kaluza-Klein field equations
Vacuum field equations
"Vacuum field equations" are the field equations written without matter (including sources). Solutions of the vacuum field equations are called
vacuum solution s.ee also
*
Classical field theory
*Field (physics)
*Quantum field theory References
* Carl Murray, "Is the Solar System stable?", http://www.fortunecity.com/emachines/e11/86/solarsys.html
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