If Maxwell's equations were a piece of hardware, most of us would be eager to see what's inside the box. But you won't find the literary equivalent of a physical teardown because the subject is ...
Weldon writes, "I doubt I'm the only one with this, but Maxwell's Equations in differential form on my arm are attached. Unfortunately it's hard to get any shot of all four at once (given the ...
Maxwell’s Equations can be expressed in multiple variants – there are integral and differential versions in both frequency and time domains, along with quasi-static and full-wave forms. Their elegance ...
I know an engineer who never bothered to memorize Ohm’s law. She says that when she needs it, she can always derive it from Maxwell’s equations. On the other hand, despite the fact that I aced my ...
One hundred and fifty years ago, James Clerk Maxwell presented a set of equations that describes virtually any manifestation of electromagnetism. Is it possible to find similarly compact descriptions ...
CATALOG DESCRIPTION: Introduction to the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method in numerical modeling of electromagnetic and optical wave interactions with engineering structures. Topics: finite ...
Most standard software for modeling magnetic fields uses the standard finite-element method. For some problems, however, an alternate boundary-element formulation can be much more efficient. To ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results