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MAXWELL & THE REVOLVING ELECTRON

Arthur M. Young

In every college text I can find it is stated that James Clerk Maxwell said the revolving electron radiates electro-magnetic energy. In fact this was the general consensus when the idea came up of the atom as a nucleus surrounded by revolving electrons. The objection was raised that because the revolving electron radiates, the electron must soon lose its energy and fall into the nucleus. This enigma remained until in 1913 Niels Bohr explained that in the atom the revolving electron does not radiate unless it jumps into a new orbit with different angular momentum (different , or area), and that this resultant radiation would be in quanta, i.e., units of angular momentum. Since Max Planck in 1900 had discovered that radiation from a black body (i.e., radiation in general) occurred only in quanta, this was a confirmation of quantum theory and explained the facts.

Bohr's explanation had an even more drastic implication: the laws of quantum theory and the laws of classical physics were different! Molar matter (matter made up of billions of atoms) followed the laws of Newton and quantum phenomena another set of laws. This set Albert Einstein on his quest for a unified field theory, which has still not been found. Thus we have had three-quarters of a century of a division of science, mainly because of Maxwell's dictum that the revolving electron radiated electromagnetic energy.

I do not wish to detract from Maxwell's remarkable prediction of radio waves and other forms of electro-magnetic radiation. However, it strikes me as absurd that even without the problem of the revolving electron a moment of attention to known facts would have shown Maxwell to be in error. A DC magnet involves electrons moving in a circular orbit around the coil of the magnet, and such a magnet does not radiate electromagnetic energy!

On the other hand, in a radio circuit that radiates electromagnetic energy, the electrons do not revolve in a circular orbit; they oscillate, that is, reverse their direction millions of times per second (the frequency of the radio wave). The essential feature of an oscillating circuit is that it consists of a coil like the DC magnet, but the continuity of the circuit is interrupted by a condenser, essentially two metal plates, one connected to each end of the coil and insulated from the other with a non-conductor like glass or mica.

The electrons cannot jump across the condenser, so they have to reverse their direction - back and forth, back and forth. The importance of this reversal of electron motion is that it reverses the magnetic field in the coil - very rapidly in the case of a radio, and even more so in a TV.

Still higher frequencies, which require shorter circuits, require much smaller antennas, but there is an advantage in that the shorter wave length can be reflected and directed, as are radar waves by radar antennas. These "antennas" in turn merge into the reflectors of electric heaters and the reflectors for auto headlights and flashlights.

Let us return to the DC magnet. Since it does produce a magnetic field filling all space, why does this field not constitute radiation of electromagnetic energy? How does the production of a field differ from the transmission of electromagnetic energy? One difference is that it takes almost no energy to create a field. When the current in the magnet is turned on there is a minute expenditure of energy; but the maintenance of this field doesn't require additional energy and doesn't radiate energy. It does create a force, but a force is not energy.

A familiar example of this difference is the Cadillac stuck in the mud. The farmer comes along with his horse and pulls the Cadillac out of the mud. How can the one-horsepower horse pull more than the Cadillac? The horse can pull about 600 pounds of force for a distance of 10 feet and get the Cadillac out of the mud. Doing this in about 10 seconds would mean doing 600 foot pounds of energy per second, which is about one horsepower. The Cadillac cannot exert this force because its wheels slip in the mud. On the highway it can produce a force (its own drag) of 200 lbs. at, say, 100 ft. per second, thus doing 20,000 ft. lbs. per second of work, or 40 horsepower.

Electrostatic force is similar. An electric charge creates a force, but it doesn't radiate energy. To help with the distinction, suppose you pulled on the string of a musical instrument. This would require a force, and energy so stored would not be radiated until the string was released and vibrated. Then energy would radiate as sound.

Similarly if you pulled a bow-string, that would require a force. If you then released it to shoot an arrow, the arrow would convey energy to a distant target. This bow-and-arrow image has become a symbol for action at a distance, which also describes the quantum of action, now known to be responsible for all conveyance of energy from atom to atom. (When two objects collide, their atoms don't touch because the atom is 99.99 percent pure space. Their force fields interpenetrate and photons are created.)

Alternating current makes possible another example of radiation because with it we can use a transformer to change voltage - for example, to reduce the voltage of the power lines (2000 volts) to that suitable for household appliances, electric lights, etc. (110 volts). Such a transformer consists of two coils whose turns differ by the same ratio as the reduction, of voltage. Or again, transformers are used to reduce the house current from 110 volts to 1-1/2 volts for charging batteries. For long-distance transmission, transformers raise the voltage to 200,000 volts, making it possible to carry a lot of energy through a relatively thin wire.

The alternating current in one coil induces in the other coil an alternating current of different voltage. This is not possible with DC current. AC was invented by Nikola Tesla and was an improvement over the DC used by Thomas Edison. The point is that DC current, which consists of electrons moving in a circle, does not radiate even from one coil to another, whereas alternating current, in which the electrons do not revolve but oscillate, does radiate energy from one coil of the transformer to the other and can do so only if the direction of the current alternates at a frequency, in current practice 60 cycles per second.

All radiation is at a certain frequency. For radio the frequency is about one million cycles per second, or one million Hertz; for light it is 10 to the 15th, or about one quadrillion Hertz; for the 1BEV (one billion electron-volt) photons that create particles it is 10 to the 22nd, or ten quintillion Hertz.

Now frequency is the rate at which the magnetic field reverses, and since the field depends on the direction of rotation of the electron which must slow down, stop, and reverse direction, it must change its acceleration. The correct statement of Maxwell's law should therefore be that a change of acceleration of the electron causes radiation (or absorption) of energy. Such a law would conform to the facts that:

1. a revolving electron, whether in an atom or in a DC magnet, does not radiate;

2. in a radio circuit the electrons do not go around in one direction, but must oscillate at a   frequency;

3. all radiation is a frequency, that is, involves periodic change.

Frequency (cycles per second) is division by time. But what do we divide? We might expect that energy divided by time would be electromagnetic energy, but this is power - foot pounds per second, or . To obtain or action (which is what is radiated), we must divide by time. What is ?  It is called moment of inertia - as in a flywheel, which smooths out (governs) the intermittent explosions of the gasoline engine. Since involves it is an area; divided by time it means change of area with respect to time and confirms the rule that an electron in an atom must change the area of its orbit to radiate electromagnetic energy. Thus an electron in the ground state cannot radiate because its "orbit" has no area.

 

Mathematics, Physics & Reality

 

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