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as just setting, and is one of several factors that must be considered, as discussed in the
                        next section.
                          Uniqueness implies that the electromagnetic state of an isolated region of space may
                        be determined without the knowledge of conditions outside the region. If we wish to
                        solve Maxwell’s equations for that region, we need know only the source density within
                        the region and the values of the tangential fields over the bounding surface. The effects
                        of a complicated external world are thus reduced to the specification of surface fields.
                        This concept has numerous applications to problems in antennas, diffraction, and guided
                        waves.


                        2.2.2   Constitutive relations

                          We now supply a set of constitutive relations to complete the conditions for well-
                        posedness. We generally split these relations into two sets. The first describes the
                        relationships between the electromagnetic field quantities, and the second describes me-
                        chanical interaction between the fields and resulting secondary sources. All of these
                        relations depend on the properties of the medium supporting the electromagnetic field.
                        Material phenomena are quite diverse, and it is remarkable that the Maxwell–Minkowski
                        equations hold for all phenomena yet discovered. All material effects, from nonlinearity
                        to chirality to temporal dispersion, are described by the constitutive relations.
                          The specification of constitutive relationships is required in many areas of physical
                        science to describe the behavior of “ideal materials”: mathematical models of actual
                        materials encountered in nature. For instance, in continuum mechanics the constitutive
                        equations describe the relationship between material motions and stress tensors [209].
                        Truesdell and Toupin [199] give an interesting set of “guiding principles” for the con-
                        cerned scientist to use when constructing constitutive relations. These include consider-
                        ation of consistency (with the basic conservation laws of nature), coordinate invariance
                        (independence of coordinate system), isotropy and aeolotropy (dependence on, or inde-
                        pendence of, orientation), just setting (constitutive parameters should lead to a unique
                        solution), dimensional invariance (similarity), material indifference (non-dependence on
                        the observer), and equipresence (inclusion of all relevant physical phenomena in all of
                        the constitutive relations across disciplines).
                          The constitutive relations generally involve a set of constitutive parameters and a set
                        of constitutive operators. The constitutive parameters may be as simple as constants
                        of proportionality between the fields or they may be components in a dyadic relation-
                        ship. The constitutive operators may be linear and integro-differential in nature, or may
                        imply some nonlinear operation on the fields. If the constitutive parameters are spa-
                        tially constant within a certain region, we term the medium homogeneous within that
                        region. If the constitutive parameters vary spatially, the medium is inhomogeneous.If
                        the constitutive parameters are constants with time, we term the medium stationary;
                        if they are time-changing, the medium is nonstationary. If the constitutive operators
                        involve time derivatives or integrals, the medium is said to be temporally dispersive;if
                        space derivatives or integrals are involved, the medium is spatially dispersive. Examples
                        of all these effects can be found in common materials. It is important to note that the
                        constitutive parameters may depend on other physical properties of the material, such
                        as temperature, mechanical stress, and isomeric state, just as the mechanical constitu-
                        tive parameters of a material may depend on the electromagnetic properties (principle
                        of equipresence).
                          Many effects produced by linear constitutive operators, such as those associated with




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