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Electromagnetism uniqueness theorem

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Providing boundary conditions for Maxwell's equations uniquely fixes a solution

The electromagnetism uniqueness theorem states the uniqueness (but not necessarily the existence) of a solution to Maxwell's equations, if the boundary conditions provided satisfy the following requirements:

  1. At t = 0 {\displaystyle t=0} , the initial values of all fields (E, H, B and D) everywhere (in the entire volume considered) is specified;
  2. For all times (of consideration), the component of either the electric field E or the magnetic field H tangential to the boundary surface ( n ^ × E {\displaystyle {\hat {n}}\times \mathbf {E} } or n ^ × H {\displaystyle {\hat {n}}\times \mathbf {H} } , where n ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {n}}} is the normal vector at a point on the boundary surface) is specified.

Note that this theorem must not be misunderstood as that providing boundary conditions (or the field solution itself) uniquely fixes a source distribution, when the source distribution is outside of the volume specified in the initial condition. One example is that the field outside a uniformly charged sphere may also be produced by a point charge placed at the center of the sphere instead, i.e. the source needed to produce such field at a boundary outside the sphere is not unique.

See also

References

Specific
  1. Smith, Glenn S. (1997-08-13). An Introduction to Classical Electromagnetic Radiation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521586986.
  2. "2.8: Uniqueness Theorem". Physics LibreTexts. 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2022-12-11.


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