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Enon's avatar

Heaviside did more to obscure than to develop EM theory. His formulation using vectors was simply wrong. The electric field and the magnetic field are of different dimensions, the former can be treated as a vector, but then the latter is a bivector, or oriented area. "Axial vectors" and cross-products are bunk. If W.K. Clifford hadn't died before his 34th birthday in 1879, EM theory and physics in general would have been advanced by decades. See John Denker's translation of Maxwell/Heaviside equations into Geometric/Clifford Algebra: https://www.av8n.com/physics/maxwell-ga.htm - many other worthwhile articles on his site.

Though the fluid analogy has limitations when dealing with fields, it is far better for understanding actual circuits than Heaviside's obscure thickets of notation. When I taught electronics to elementary school students, fluid theory was the only way to build their intuition, and it worked well for not only resistors and voltage sources, but Kirchoff's rules, capacitors, (at least the phase behavior of) inductors, and even BJTs and FETs. I often used (amasci.com) Bill Beatty's diagrams for the fluid analogy examples, but he also had a better illustration of the fields around a circuit the same as your example above, and his "duck disruptor" was a far more enlightening example of a phased-array emitter than anything in a textbook.

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The Logician's avatar

Isn't amazing how electrodynamics can be explained through fluid mechanics. Electricity is able to adapt just like water can to its surroundings. These relationships are proof that energy is a form of energetic fluid of some sort.

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