The Elementary Laws of Transversal Exchange
George P. Shpenkov
shpenkov@janmax.com
April 28, 2008
Abstract
The
development of systems of units led to the sad fact that two parameters, current
and circulation, characterizing different subfields (longitudinal and
transversal, "electric" and "magnetic") of the unit longitudinal-transversal
field have obtained the same name - current, although in principle, in their
dimensions and physical meaning, they are different. This fact is reflected, in
particular, in the erroneous presentation in modern physics, both in form and
contents, the elementary laws of electrodynamics (Ampere's and Biot-Savart). The
above faults, inherent also in Maxwell's equations, are uncovered in detail in
this work in the framework of dialectical physics. The oldest puzzle in physics
concerning magnetic charges (so-called "magnetic monopoles") obtains the natural
solution herein.
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