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Chapter 20 Electric Forces and Fields
Chapter 20 Electric Forces and Fields

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06_chapter 1

Lecture 5
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... We have c2 = c3 = 20 μF in parallel. The equivalent capacitor is then Ceq = 40 μF. When the switch is thrown to right, the battery is disconnected, the charge is shared between the capacitors C1 and Ceq = 40. What is the charge on old C2 and C3? Is your answer 40 μC? What is your answer if C2 = 10 μ ...
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... As is well-known, coherent states appear in a very natural way when considering the classical limit or the infrared properties of quantum field theories like quantum electrodynamics (QED)[16]-[21] or in analysis of the infrared properties of quantum gravity [22, 23]. In the conventional and extremel ...
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... belief that solids state materials consist of ordered arrangements of atoms. Solids state theory has benefited greatly from advances in mathematics and modern physics over the past century. Notable contributions include the application of group theory to the study of crystallographic symmetry system ...
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... vector satisfying ~λ2 = λ2 . Again, the vacuum does not remain empty, but it contains the VEV of our vector field. Because we have only considered ~ hCi ~ is also spacetime independent (x dependence would constant solutions C, lead to positive definite derivative terms in Eq. (4) raising the energy ...
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... True, there are lots of new words to learn and important relationships between angles. However, in this diagram, the situation is straightforward. The eight angles fall into two sets. Angles S, Q, N are all equal to the angle marked as 72° (these are all the acute angles). What about the second set? ...
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... coupling is quantified, and a growth estimates is given for the induced modes. Paper IV deals with discontinuous electromagnetic waves, shock waves. It is shown that in order for these waves to be stable, they must satisfy a number of conditions, similar to Lax’s classical shock conditions. These co ...
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Introduction to gauge theory

A gauge theory is a type of theory in physics. Modern theories describe physical forces in terms of fields, e.g., the electromagnetic field, the gravitational field, and fields that describe forces between the elementary particles. A general feature of these field theories is that the fundamental fields cannot be directly measured; however, some associated quantities can be measured, such as charges, energies, and velocities. In field theories, different configurations of the unobservable fields can result in identical observable quantities. A transformation from one such field configuration to another is called a gauge transformation; the lack of change in the measurable quantities, despite the field being transformed, is a property called gauge invariance. Since any kind of invariance under a field transformation is considered a symmetry, gauge invariance is sometimes called gauge symmetry. Generally, any theory that has the property of gauge invariance is considered a gauge theory. For example, in electromagnetism the electric and magnetic fields, E and B, are observable, while the potentials V (""voltage"") and A (the vector potential) are not. Under a gauge transformation in which a constant is added to V, no observable change occurs in E or B.With the advent of quantum mechanics in the 1920s, and with successive advances in quantum field theory, the importance of gauge transformations has steadily grown. Gauge theories constrain the laws of physics, because all the changes induced by a gauge transformation have to cancel each other out when written in terms of observable quantities. Over the course of the 20th century, physicists gradually realized that all forces (fundamental interactions) arise from the constraints imposed by local gauge symmetries, in which case the transformations vary from point to point in space and time. Perturbative quantum field theory (usually employed for scattering theory) describes forces in terms of force-mediating particles called gauge bosons. The nature of these particles is determined by the nature of the gauge transformations. The culmination of these efforts is the Standard Model, a quantum field theory that accurately predicts all of the fundamental interactions except gravity.
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