Physics:Electromagnetic stress–energy tensor

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In relativistic physics, the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor is the contribution to the stress–energy tensor due to the electromagnetic field.[1] The stress–energy tensor describes the flow of energy and momentum in spacetime. The electromagnetic stress–energy tensor contains the negative of the classical Maxwell stress tensor that governs the electromagnetic interactions.

Definition

SI units

In free space and flat space–time, the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor in SI units is[2]

Tμν=1μ0[FμαFνα14ημνFαβFαβ].

where Fμν is the electromagnetic tensor and where ημν is the Minkowski metric tensor of metric signature (−+++). When using the metric with signature (+−−−), the expression for Tμν will have opposite sign.

Explicitly in matrix form:

Tμν=[12(ϵ0E2+1μ0B2)Sx/cSy/cSz/cSx/cσxxσxyσxzSy/cσyxσyyσyzSz/cσzxσzyσzz],

where

𝐒=1μ0𝐄×𝐁,

is the Poynting vector,

σij=ϵ0EiEj+1μ0BiBj12(ϵ0E2+1μ0B2)δij

is the Maxwell stress tensor, and c is the speed of light. Thus, Tμν is expressed and measured in SI pressure units (pascals).

CGS units

The permittivity of free space and permeability of free space in cgs-Gaussian units are

ϵ0=14π,μ0=4π

then:

Tμν=14π[FμαFνα14ημνFαβFαβ].

and in explicit matrix form:

Tμν=[18π(E2+B2)Sx/cSy/cSz/cSx/cσxxσxyσxzSy/cσyxσyyσyzSz/cσzxσzyσzz]

where Poynting vector becomes:

𝐒=c4π𝐄×𝐁.

The stress–energy tensor for an electromagnetic field in a dielectric medium is less well understood and is the subject of the unresolved Abraham–Minkowski controversy.[3]

The element Tμν of the stress–energy tensor represents the flux of the μth-component of the four-momentum of the electromagnetic field, Pμ, going through a hyperplane (xν is constant). It represents the contribution of electromagnetism to the source of the gravitational field (curvature of space–time) in general relativity.

Algebraic properties

The electromagnetic stress–energy tensor has several algebraic properties:

Tμν=Tνμ
Tαα=0.
Proof

Starting with

Tμμ=ημνTμν

Using the explicit form of the tensor,

Tμμ=14π[ημνFμαFναημνημν14FαβFαβ]

Lowering the indices and using the fact that ημνημν=δμμ

Tμμ=14π[FμαFμαδμμ14FαβFαβ]

Then, using δμμ=4,

Tμμ=14π[FμαFμαFαβFαβ]

Note that in the first term, μ and α and just dummy indices, so we relabel them as α and β respectively.

Tαα=14π[FαβFαβFαβFαβ]=0


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The symmetry of the tensor is as for a general stress–energy tensor in general relativity. The trace of the energy-momentum tensor is a Lorentz scalar; the electromagnetic field (and in particular electromagnetic waves) has no Lorentz-invariant energy scale, so its energy-momentum tensor must have a vanishing trace. This tracelessness eventually relates to the masslessness of the photon.[4]

Conservation laws

The electromagnetic stress–energy tensor allows a compact way of writing the conservation laws of linear momentum and energy in electromagnetism. The divergence of the stress–energy tensor is:

νTμν+ημρfρ=0

where fρ is the (4D) Lorentz force per unit volume on matter.

This equation is equivalent to the following 3D conservation laws

uemt+𝐒+𝐉𝐄=0
𝐩emtσ+ρ𝐄+𝐉×𝐁=0 (or equivalently 𝐟+ϵ0μ0𝐒t=σ with 𝐟 being the Lorentz force density),

respectively describing the flux of electromagnetic energy density

uem=ϵ02E2+12μ0B2

and electromagnetic momentum density

𝐩em=𝐒c2

where J is the electric current density and ρ the electric charge density.

See also

References

  1. Gravitation, J.A. Wheeler, C. Misner, K.S. Thorne, W.H. Freeman & Co, 1973, ISBN:0-7167-0344-0
  2. Gravitation, J.A. Wheeler, C. Misner, K.S. Thorne, W.H. Freeman & Co, 1973, ISBN:0-7167-0344-0
  3. however see Pfeifer et al., Rev. Mod. Phys. 79, 1197 (2007)
  4. Garg, Anupam. Classical Electromagnetism in a Nutshell, p. 564 (Princeton University Press, 2012).