6.641 | Spring 2005 | Graduate

Electromagnetic Fields, Forces, and Motion

Textbooks

The required textbooks for the course can be found at the links below.

Electromagnetic Fields and Energy with Video Demonstrations

This text is aimed at those who have seen Maxwell’s equations in integral and differential form and who have been exposed to some integral theorems and differential operators. The accompanying video demonstrations help the student connect what is analytically derived with what is observed.

Haus, Hermann A., and James R. Melcher. Electromagnetic Fields and Energy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1989. ISBN: 9780132490207.

Electromechanical Dynamics

This text explains electromechanical dynamics, a subject that combines classical mechanics with the fundamentals of electricity and magnetism. Some of the examples include rotating machinery, plasma dynamics, electromechanics of biological systems, and magnetoelasticity. The examples used are mathematically lucid and physically demonstrable.

Woodson, H. H., and J. R. Melcher. “Part I (Discrete Systems)”. In Electromechanical Dynamics . Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co., 1990. ISBN: 978089464459.

———. “Part II (Fields, Forces, and Motion).” In Electromechanical Dynamics. Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co., 1985. ISBN: 9780898748475.

Electromagnetic Field Theory

This text is an introduction at the junior level to electromagnetic field theory. The course starts with the Coulomb-Lorentz force law on a point charge. The theory is extended by the continuous superposition of solutions from previously developed simpler problems leading to the general integral and differential field laws. This book features many worked examples emphasizing physical processes, devices, and models.

Zahn, Markus. Electromagnetic Field Theory: A Problem Solving Approach. Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co., 2003. ISBN: 9781575242354.

Course Info

Instructor
As Taught In
Spring 2005
Level
Learning Resource Types
Problem Sets with Solutions
Exams with Solutions
Lecture Notes