I don't know. Perhaps you are right. My understanding of the theory 
is limited, but please read the introduction here:

http://www.springerlink.com/content/q6634pp556m08500/fulltext.pdf

Even Feynman and Maxwell say there is no e-field.

Harry

----- Original Message -----
From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 11:46 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:The Electric Field Outside a Stationary Resistive Wire
Carrying a Constant Current

> 
> 
> Harry Veeder wrote:
> > Maxwell's theory needs the field concept. The theory says and
> > electric force can not be present without an electric field.
> >
> > If we follow Maxwell's theory to the letter, it says there will 
> be no
> >  electric field outside a current carrying wire.
> 
> I don't know what you're talking about here.  If by "Maxwell's theory"
> you mean Maxwell's four equations, as they are normally written, 
> and as
> they are embedded in the model of special relativity (which is how 
> thisis normally applied), then what you said is simply false.
> 
> If there is a current flowing through a resistive wire, then there 
> is an
> E field within the wire directed parallel to the wire.  That E 
> field is
> what drives the current, and its value is proportional to \rho*I where
> \rho is the resistivity per unit length of the wire.  The curl of 
> the E
> field within the wire and near the surface of the wire is zero, since
> 
>   Del x E = -dB/dt
> 
> in rationalized CGS units.
> 
> Since the curl is zero, if the field  points along the wire just 
> withinthe wire, it must also point along the wire just outside the 
> wire. 
> Otherwise you'd get a nonzero integral of the E vector around a small
> loop which is partly inside the wire and partly outside the wire, 
> whichwould imply the curl was nonzero.
> 
> For points near the wire, that field runs parallel to the wire.  This
> field is independent of the presence or absence of a charge outside 
> thewire.
> 
> Arguments straight out of Purcell, based directly on Maxwell's 
> equationsand the Lorentz force law, lead to the conclusion that a 
> point charge
> located close to the wire will also induce a local charge on the wire,
> which will result in a local field which is perpendicular to the 
> surfaceof the wire.  This field vanishes if we remove the external 
> charge.
> But did you perhaps mean something else by "Maxwell's theory?
> 
> (Incidentally I said "As embedded in the model of SR" because without
> that extra bit of icing you have no way of transforming the equations
> from one frame of reference to another, and no answer to the 
> question of
> what happens when moving a uniform velocity.)
> 
> 
> > Consequently, the
> > theory leads one to expect an electric force is absent as well.
> >
> > Weber's theory is not built on the field concept, so this curious
> > expectation does not arise.
> >
> > My analysis is based on reading of this preface to the book 
> suggested>  by Taylor J. Smith.
> > http://www.ifi.unicamp.br/~assis/Preface-Webers-Electrodynamics.pdf
> >
> >
> > Harry
> >
> > ----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephen A. Lawrence"
> > <[email protected]> Date: Monday, September 14, 2009 6:18 pm Subject:
> > Re: [Vo]:The Electric Field Outside a Stationary Resistive Wire
> > Carrying a Constant Current
> >
> >>
> >> Harry Veeder wrote:
> >>> fyi Harry
> >>>
> >>> Foundations of Physics © Plenum Publishing Corporation 1999
> >>> 10.1023/A:1018874523513
> >>>
> >>> The Electric Field Outside a Stationary Resistive Wire Carrying a
> >>>  Constant Current
> >>>
> >>> A. K. T. Assis, W. A. Rodrigues Jr. and A. J. Mania
> >>>
> >>> Abstract  We present the opinion of some authors who believe
> >> there is
> >>> no force between a stationary charge and a stationary resistive
> >>> wire carrying a constant current.
> >> That's stated a lot, but it's just sloppiness.  Anyone who knows
> >> electronics realizes it's not really true.
> >>
> >> A good conductor carrying small current has *nearly* zero voltage
> >> drop along any small length, and calling the drop "zero" is usually
> >> "good enough".  But really the voltage drop along any segment is
> >> equal to I*Rwhere R is the resistance of that segment.
> >>
> >> When the voltage drop along a (resistive) wire is nonzero, then
> >> *any* path which leads from a higher voltage point on the wire 
> to a
> >> lower voltage point on the same wire must traverse the same exact
> >> potential change, which means that there must be an electric field
> >> *outside* the wire, running parallel to the wire.
> >>
> >> This is well known but, as I said, usually neglected, because it's
> >> usually too small to matter in real-world problems.
> >>
> >> The fact that there's an "image charge" induced in the wire as
> >> well, which consequently must be having its effect on the charge
> >> sitting outside the wire, is certainly the case and could even be
> >> called "obvious", but it's not something I ever thought of until I
> >> saw it mentioned in the abstract.  :-)
> >>
> >>
> >>> We show that this force is different from zero and present its
> >>> main components: the force due to the charges induced in the wire
> >>> by the test charge and a force proportional to the current in the
> >>> resistive wire. We also discuss briefly a component of the force
> >>> proportional to the square of the current which should exist
> >>> according to some models and another component due to the
> >>> acceleration of the conduction electrons in a curved wire
> >>> carrying a dc current (centripetal acceleration). Finally, we
> >>> analyze experiments showing the existence of the
> >> electric> field proportional to the current in resistive wires.
> >>> complete paper available here:
> >>> http://www.springerlink.com/content/q6634pp556m08500/fulltext.html
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >
> >
> 
>

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