Page 38 - Electromagnetics
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2.2   The well-posed nature of the postulate
                          It is important to investigate whether Maxwell’s equations, along with the point form
                        of the continuity equation, suffice as a useful theory of electromagnetics. Certainly we
                        must agree that a theory is “useful” as long as it is defined as such by the scientists and
                        engineers who employ it. In practice a theory is considered useful if it predicts accurately
                        the behavior of nature under given circumstances, and even a theory that often fails may
                        be useful if it is the best available. We choose here to take a more narrow view and
                        investigate whether the theory is “well-posed.”
                          A mathematical model for a physical problem is said to be well-posed,or correctly set,
                        if three conditions hold:

                          1. the model has at least one solution (existence);
                          2. the model has at most one solution (uniqueness);
                          3. the solution is continuously dependent on the data supplied.

                        The importance of the first condition is obvious: if the electromagnetic model has no
                        solution, it will be of little use to scientists and engineers. The importance of the second
                        condition is equally obvious: if we apply two different solution methods to the same
                        model and get two different answers, the model will not be very helpful in analysis or
                        design work. The third point is more subtle; it is often extended in a practical sense to
                        the following statement:


                         3 . Small changes in the data supplied produce equally small changes in the solution.
                        That is, the solution is not sensitive to errors in the data. To make sense of this we
                        must decide which quantity is specified (the independent quantity) and which remains
                        to be calculated (the dependent quantity). Commonly the source field (charge) is taken
                        as the independent quantity, and the mediating (electromagnetic) field is computed from
                        it; in such cases it can be shown that Maxwell’s equations are well-posed. Taking the
                        electromagnetic field to be the independent quantity, we can produce situations in which
                        the computed quantity (charge or current) changes wildly with small changes in the
                        specified fields. These situations (called inverse problems) are of great importance in
                        remote sensing, where the field is measured and the properties of the object probed are
                        thereby deduced.
                          At this point we shall concentrate on the “forward” problem of specifying the source
                        field (charge) and computing the mediating field (the electromagnetic field). In this case
                        we may question whether the first of the three conditions (existence) holds. We have
                        twelve unknown quantities (the scalar components of the four vector fields), but only
                        eight equations to describe them (from the scalar components of the two fundamental
                        Maxwell equations and the two scalar auxiliary equations). With fewer equations than
                        unknowns we cannot be sure that a solution exists, and we refer to Maxwell’s equations
                        as being indefinite. To overcome this problem we must specify more information in
                        the form of constitutive relations among the field quantities E, B, D, H, and J. When
                        these are properly formulated, the number of unknowns and the number of equations
                        are equal and Maxwell’s equations are in definite form. If we provide more equations
                        than unknowns, the solution may be non-unique. When we model the electromagnetic
                        properties of materials we must supply precisely the right amount of information in the
                        constitutive relations, or our postulate will not be well-posed.




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