That means the lines shown in your diagrams are directed—we should think of them as having arrowheads on them.
They are usually shown with arrowheads, but I removed them quite deliberately. You will be familiar with
this image from
Andrew Duffy's PY107. The picture is accompanied by this text:
"Lines of force are also called field lines. Field lines start on positive charges and end on negative charges, and the direction of the field line at a point tells you what direction the force experienced by a charge will be if the charge is placed at that point". The issue with that is that the force experienced by a charged particle depends on the other charged particle. Two electrons repel, and there is no positive charge to start your field line. The article goes on to say
"if the charge is positive, it will experience a force in the same direction as the field" which suggests that two positrons will be attracted to one another.
Your "current-in-the-wire" remark also implies symmetry within the plane but limited symmetry in 3-dimensional space. More on that in a moment...
See the opening posts for more on the current-in-the-wire where the field has a cylindrical disposition. The electron's field has a spherical disposition, but it is difficult to depict curled as opposed to curved lines.
The electromagnetic field does deserve depiction, but item c not only fails to do so accurately, it is downright misleading. That has been a common criticism of your diagrams since the day you started this thread. Please listen when the physicists explain to you why item c is misleading.
I'm always listening, but no way is that picture downright misleading. It delivers vital insight.
The electromagnetic tensor field is hard to depict within a 2-dimensional diagram because the electromagnetic field is 6-dimensional.
Here we go again. A tensor is a mathematical object. It is used to describe the electromagnetic field, but it is not what that field is. That field is "a state of space" according to
Einstein. And that space is three-dimensional. You then add the time "dimension" as per Minkowski's time axis comment.
The electric field E surrounding an electron is symmetric under all rotations and reflections about the source. That's easy to depict: draw something like item a and tell your readers it would look the same under all rotations and reflections about the central point.
Sigh. There is no electric field surrounding an electron. The electron
is field. Electromagnetic field. Or electron field if you prefer. But not electric field, and the electron itself is not some billiard-ball or pointlike speck in the middle.
What you have done in item b, however, is to show something like the magnetic field within a coordinate system in which there is a current running through your central point and orthogonal to the page. Your items a and b therefore depict different physical systems, which is already misleading.
I acknowledge that b does not adequately depict the electron's magnetic dipole. But if I pursued this you would doubtless criticise me for depicting a
toroidal electron.
When you combine depictions of unrelated systems into item c, your depiction loses contact with physical reality: There is no longer any single physical system you are even trying to depict.
No, it makes contact with physical reality. At last. And it is a
million times better than electrons and positrons slinging photons at one another.
You could fix that by revising your explanation of item a to say it shows the electric field E around a charged wire through which a current is also running...
Thank you for the suggestion, but that moves away from what Minkowski said about the field of the electron and the force-screw. It moves away from the fundamental physics which starts with the charged particle. Or should I say with four-potential and the photon, but let's come back to that.
As has been noted earlier within this thread, the electric field E and magnetic field B have different units. You can't just add them together, as the "+" sign in your diagram suggests.
Noted. Perhaps I could use something other than a + sign to get across the fact that they are different aspects of the greater whole.
For all of the above reasons (and for other reasons that will be explained to you momentarily by other people), the usual way to depict the 6-dimensional electromagnetic tensor field Fμν is to decompose it into fields of lower dimension. The usual way to do that is to decompose Fμν into two 3-dimensional vector fields E and B...
There's no other way for me to say this Clinger: this usual way is badly, badly, misleading. It has obstructed scientific progress for fifty years.
The reasons for that particular decomposition become evident when you look at the
Lorentz force law...
Here's a snippet from the opening paragraph:
If a particle of charge q moves with velocity v in the presence of an electric field E and a magnetic field B... It isn't a good start. You are into circular reasoning and something that fails to capture that "greater whole".
or at the
components of Fμν. When written as a matrix, the components of F
μν have an obvious decomposition into a 3-vector that consists of the components of
E together with a 3x3 matrix that contains all the components of
B without any components of
E. Although you have criticized that decomposition, it has a lot going for it. Your main criticism, consisting of incessant quotation of a single sentence from Jackson's
Classical Electromagnetism, has taken that sentence out of context. Indeed, you often omit the first part of that sentence: "But the fields are completely interrelated". That interrelationship between
E and
B must be taken into account whenever we transform from one coordinate system to another, which is the topic of Jackson's 11.10. The very first equation of that section, equation (11.146), is the same as Einstein's equation (8) from Die Grundlage der allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie. When you interpret the rest of Jackson's sentence to mean we shouldn't talk about
E and
B at all, as you have often done within this thread, you are just reminding us of how
you got lost at Einstein's equation (3).
I haven't got lost. I've found the way forward. Out of your cargo-cult darkness. Yes. And you heard about it here first.
ben m's question is relevant, and you shouldn't try to escape the question by proclaiming your idiosyncratic semantics. You could answer the question by specifying the symmetries of your diagrams in 3-dimensional space, as I did above by mentioning the relevant symmetries, but it's probably going to be easier for you to answer ben m's question using the orthogonal sections ben m suggested.
I don't try to escape questions. I responded to ben's question, he's free to clarify or demand a further response.
NB: please try to keep your posts succinct.