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Translation:On the spacetime lines of a Minkowski world/Paragraph 3

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Translation:On the spacetime lines of a Minkowski world
by Friedrich Kottler, translated from German by Wikisource
§3. Maxwell's equations and the integral forms; Maxwell's equations in generalized coordinates
2291638Translation:On the spacetime lines of a Minkowski world — §3. Maxwell's equations and the integral forms; Maxwell's equations in generalized coordinatesWikisourceFriedrich Kottler

The two Maxwell quadruples as coefficients of two mutually dual integral forms

[edit]

The considerations shall now be based on Minkowski's , the “world”, :

.

With

the Maxwell quadrupels become in orthogonal Cartesian coordinates

where

and

If we treat as covariant, then this is evidently somewhat arbitrary in terms of Cartesian orthogonal coordinates, since covariants and contravariantes coincide here. If we would require (following Abraham) that the transform like the products of the corresponding components of the radius vector, then we would have to postulate the as contravariants. By passage to the reciprocal system we can, however, represent them as convariants. For the sake of being easier related to the integral forms, we stick to the covariant description.

Now, these two quadruple are the coefficients of two mutually dual integral forms.[1] Thus we write, still in Cartesian coordinates,

Of course, satisfies the continuity equations, because (see § 1):

The disappearance of the etc. gives us the reason for the introduction of the potentials, because it is consequently ; we write

(thus

where the potential vector is treated as covariant as well. We have

where is the vector potential, the scalar potential. By substitution into the first quadruple it follows

etc.

and here it is set

since the fields remain correct in consequence of the representation as , if an additional vector is added to ; the arbitrariness in the values of the is resolved by the previous condition. It follows

with the known solution of Herglotz[2]

where

is the radius vector of the reference-point with respect to point . It is known, as to how the integration in the complex plane is carried out by means of a loop, which is clock-wise circulating around the negative imaginary semi-axis. To a fixed value system belongs a pole , for which we have

,

upon which the loop is to be drawn together; is then a light-point for , that is, is a minimal vector and is negative imaginary or lies on the pre-cone of (Minkowski).

The Maxwell quadruple in generalized coordinates.

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By means of the invariance of the integral forms it follows, if one uses

with as timelike coordinate, and if

is now defined as:

etc.

etc.

for which it follows with the aid of the potentials:

.

For the the equations hold (see § 2, end):

etc.

or, if as before the condition

is imposed on them:

etc.

or by the introduction of the vector reciprocal to :

:

Maybe it is not superfluous to mention, that for instance

can be transformed into the form (see § 2)

,

though this cannot be done with our previous four equations, therefore it will be avoided to denote them by .[3] On the other hand, the conditional equation between the has the form:

By that, we have derived everything that is needed for the purpose of our investigation; before we proceed, however, a remark may have its place here:

On the polar nature of and the axial nature of .

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The most general direction-changing transformations can namely always be traced back to a transformation multiplied by a change of direction of the coordinate axes. Now, because of the irreversibility of time (permutation of pre- and after-cone would indeed be a permutation of cause and effect), in Minkowski's we always have:

,

therefore we can confine ourselves to the change of direction

and here we see, that , , transform as a vector of second kind, i.e.

,

while , , transform as a vector of first kind, i.e.

.

In the dual system

the transformations are exactly reversed due to the change of sign of the in accordance with the rule given in § 1:

and

.

In Cartesian coordinates, where etc. and , this is of course self-evident. From this different nature of the two vectors and the known advantage can be drawn, for instance, with respect to the known theorem of optics: “When standing waves are reflected, the electrical vector has a vibration node at the the mirror surface, the magnetic vector has a vibration antinode”,[4] or with respect of the analogous theorem of the phase change by half a wave-length in the case of reflection.



  1. Bateman, London Math. Soc. Proc. 1910 (8), p. 227 ff.
  2. Herglotz, Göttinger Nachrichten, 1904.
  3. Therefore the absolute differential calculus cannot be circumvented. One should notice though, how easy the general form of an invariant, covariant or contravariant emerges from the Cartesian one by means of its methods. It is sufficient to replace the ordinary differential quotients by co- or contravariant ones, besides the connection with certain factors , . See Wright, l.c. p. 27.
  4. Drude, Optik, 1. Aufl., p. 264.