
Electromagnetic Radiation is a graduate level book on classical electrodynamics with a strong emphasis on radiation. This book is meant to quickly and efficiently introduce students to the electromagnetic radiation science essential to a practicing physicist. While a major focus is on light and its interactions, topics in radio frequency radiation, x-rays, and beyond are also treated. Special emphasis is placed on applications, with many exercises and homework problems. The format of the book is designed to convey the basic concepts of a topic in the main central text in the book in a mathematically rigorous manner, but with detailed derivations routinely relegated to the accompanying side notes or end of chapter "Discussions." The book is composed of four parts: Part I is a review of basic E&M, and assumes the reader has a had a good upper division undergraduate course, and while it offers a concise review of topics covered in such a course, it does not treat any given topic in detail; specifically electro- and magnetostatics. Part II addresses the origins of radiation in terms of time variations of charge and current densities within the source, and presents Jefimenko's field equations as derived from retarded potentials. Part III introduces special relativity and its deep connection to Maxwell's equations, together with an introduction to relativistic field theory, as well as the relativistic treatment of radiation from an arbitrarily accelerating charge. A highlight of this part is a chapter on the still partially unresolved problem of radiation reaction on an accelerating charge. Part IV treats the practical problems of electromagnetic radiation interacting with matter, with chapters on energy transport, scattering, diffraction and finally an illuminating, application-oriented treatment of fields in confined environments.
This text investigates the fundamental principles of electromagnetic radiation and their practical applications for the practicing physicist. The authors, Gregory P. Lafyatis, James A. King, and Richard R. Freeman, utilize a structured pedagogical approach to bridge the gap between undergraduate electrodynamics and graduate-level research. By separating core conceptual explanations from rigorous mathematical derivations, the text provides a streamlined framework for mastering radiation theory, relativistic field interactions, and light-matter dynamics.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the utility of the side-note format for separating conceptual flow from complex derivations. Experts highlight this as a focused, efficient resource for graduate students requiring a practical command of radiation science.
Page Count:
624
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191793329
ISBN-13:
9780191793325
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