Title: A Theoretical Investigation of Magnetic Monopoles
1A Theoretical Investigation of Magnetic Monopoles
- Chad A. Middleton
- Mesa State College
- October 22, 2009
2A Brief History of the Magnetic Monopole.
- On the Magnet, Pierre de Maricourt, Letter to
Siger de Foucaucourt (1269) - Petrus Peregrinus defines magnetic poles and
observes that they are never seen in isolation. - Law of Magnetic Force, C.A. Coulomb (1788)
- Establishes for magnetic poles that force varies
inversely as the square and is proportional to
the product of the pole strength. - The Action of Currents on Magnets, H.C Oersted
(1820) - Provides the first sign that electricity and
magnetism are connected. - Electrodynamic Model of Magnetism, A. M. Ampere
(1820) - Asserts that all magnetism is due to moving
electric charges, explaining why magnets do not
have isolated poles. - Principle of magnetic ambiguity
3A Brief History of the Magnetic Monopole.
- On the Possible Existence of Magnetic
Conductivity and Free Magnetism, P. Curie,
Seances Soc. Phys. (Paris, 1894) pp. 76-77 - 1st post-Amperian proposal of isolated poles
- Quantized Singularities in the Electromagnetic
Field, P.A.M. Dirac, Proc. R. Soc. London Ser. A
133, 60-72 (1931) - The Theory of Magnetic Monopoles, P.A.M. Dirac,
Phys. Rev. 74, 817-830 (1948) - Concludes that product of magnitude of an
isolated electric charge and magnetic pole must
be an integral multiple of a smallest unit. - First Results from a Superconductive Device for
Moving Magnetic Monopoles, B. Cabrera, Phys.
Lett. 48, 1378-1380 (1982) - Reports a signal in an induction detector, which
in principle is unique to a monopole.
4Maxwells Equations in Integral form (in vacuum)
Gauss Law for E-field Gauss Law for
B-field Faradays Law Amperes Law with
Maxwells Correction
5Using the Divergence Theorem and Stokes Theorem
- The Divergence Theorem
- Stokes Theorem
for a general vector field
6Maxwells Equations in differential form (in
vacuum)
Gauss Law for E-field Gauss Law for
B-field Faradays Law Amperes Law with
Maxwells Correction
these plus
the Lorentz force completely describe Classical
Electromagnetic Theory
7Taking the divergence of the 4th Maxwell Eqn
yields..
Equation of Continuity Conservation of Electric
Charge
8Taking the curl of the 3rd 4th eqns (in
free space when ?e Je 0) yield..
The wave equations for the E-, B-fields with
predicted wave speed
Light EM wave!
9Back to Maxwells Equations
Gauss Law for E-field Gauss Law for
B-field Faradays Law Amperes Law with
Maxwells Correction
- Maxwells equations are almost symmetrical
- allow for the existence of a
- magnetic charge density, ?m a magnetic
current, Jm
10Maxwells Equations become
Gauss Law for E-field Gauss Law for
B-field Faradays Law Amperes Law with
Maxwells Correction
the Lorentz force becomes
11Taking the divergence of the 3rd 4th eqns
yield..
Equation of Continuity ? Electric Magnetic
Charge are each conserved
separately
12Does the existence of magnetic charges have
observable EM consequences?Not if all
particles have the same ratio of qm/qe !
13Maxwells Equations are Invariant under the
Duality Transformations
- Matter of convention to speak of a particle
possessing qe not qm - (so long as qe / qm constant for all particles)
14So long as qe / qm constant for all particles
Set
This sets the Mixing Angle
and yields
- Notice
- for this choice of a, our original Maxwells
Equations are recovered! - existence of monopoles existence of particles
with different a
15Dirac Quantization Condition
Dirac showed that the existence of even a single
Magnetic Monopole (a.k.a a particle with a
different mixing angle) requires qe , qm be
quantized.
where
- Quantized Singularities in the Electromagnetic
Field, P.A.M. Dirac, Proc. R. Soc. London Ser. A
133, 60-72 (1931) - The Theory of Magnetic Monopoles, P.A.M. Dirac,
Phys. Rev. 74, 817-830 (1948)