Electric field of electric current

In summary, electric current includes the moving charges which produce an electric field at a stationary point.
  • #1
hokhani
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Does electric current also produces electric field (in addition to magnetic field) at a typical stationary point? In other words, electric current includes the moving charges. Do these charges produce electric field at a stationary point? Or, does the electric field of these charges come into the form of the magnetic field observed at this point?
 
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  • #2
All charges produce an electric field.
The magnetic field is the effect of an electric field due to moving charges.
You've seen the special relativity explanation of magnetism?
 
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  • #3
Simon Bridge said:
All charges produce an electric field.
The magnetic field is the effect of an electric field due to moving charges.
You've seen the special relativity explanation of magnetism?
Thanks. I haven't seen the special relativity explanation of magnetism. Do you mean that one who is moving with charge, sees the electric field of charges at the stationary point while one who is resting at the stationary point, sees that field as a magnetic field?
 
  • #4
That's the idea ... but since there is no such thing as a "stationary point", we have to say an observer who is stationary wrt the wire carrying a current see's the B field of the current while the one stationary wrt the current sees just an electrostatic field. Electricity and magnetism are "unified" into one electromagnetic force, with the everyday separate-seeming effects actually being mixed up together like time and space is in relativity - it's the effect of perspective.
The more complete description is that both effects are the result of an underlying phenomenon we call "electromagnetism". The whole thing is even simpler in the particle physics model. Where is your education up to right now?
 
  • #5
Simon Bridge said:
Where is your education up to right now?
I am PhD student of solid state physics and I haven't been involved in some fundamental concepts.
 
  • #6
Oh neat - we share a field, though I have not practised for some time. Electromagnetism is fundamental to solid state, but you have more quantum theory than relativity.

You would normally cover the unification of electricity and magnetism in year 1 undergraduate work (In NZ anyways)... but the SR description may not be covered until year 2. Looks like you just need a primer ... a quickie is to find the lecture series where the subject is covered and ask the lecturer for the notes (and/or sit-in on the lectures). There's a bunch of different ways to catch up depending on where your maths is: it may be worthwhile to start with covarient formulism of Maxwell's equations and GR in flat spacetime than go back to undergrad step-by-step. OR just think in terms of field theory.
 

Related to Electric field of electric current

1. What is an electric field of an electric current?

The electric field of an electric current is a region in space where an electrically charged particle experiences a force. It is created by the movement of charged particles, typically electrons, through a conductor.

2. How is the strength of an electric field related to the electric current?

The strength of an electric field is directly proportional to the electric current. This means that as the electric current increases, the strength of the electric field also increases.

3. Can electric current flow without an electric field?

No, an electric current cannot flow without an electric field. The electric field is what drives the movement of charged particles through a conductor, creating the flow of electric current.

4. How is the direction of an electric field determined?

The direction of an electric field is determined by the direction that a positive test charge would experience a force in that field. It is always directed away from positive charges and towards negative charges.

5. How does the shape of a conductor affect the electric field of an electric current?

The shape of a conductor can affect the electric field of an electric current by altering the distribution of charges. For example, a pointed conductor will have a stronger electric field at its tip compared to a rounded conductor.

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