The left hand sides of each equation correspond to wave motion (the D'Alembert operator acting on the fields), while the right hand sides are the wave sources. The equations imply that EM waves are generated if there are gradients in charge density ρ, circulations in current density J, time-varying current density, or any mixture of these.
These forms of the wave equations are not often used in practice, as the source terms are inconveniently complicated. A simpler formulation more commonly encountered in the literature and used in theory use the electromagnetic potential formulation, presented next.
The four Maxwell's equations in a vacuum with charge ρ and current J sources reduce to two equations, Gauss's law for electricity is:
where here is the Laplacian applied on scalar functions, and the Ampère-Maxwell law is:
where here is the vector Laplacian applied on vector fields. The source terms are now much simpler, but the wave terms are less obvious. Since the potentials are not unique, but have gauge freedom, these equations can be simplified by gauge fixing. A common choice is the Lorenz gauge condition:
Then the nonhomogeneous wave equations become uncoupled and symmetric in the potentials:
Time dilation in transversal motion. The requirement that the speed of light is constant in every inertial reference frame leads to the theory of relativity
The electromagnetic wave equation is modified in two ways in curved spacetime, the derivative is replaced with the covariant derivative and a new term that depends on the curvature appears (SI units).
where
is the Ricci curvature tensor. Here the semicolon indicates covariant differentiation. To obtain the equation in cgs units, replace the permeability with 4π/c.
Solutions to the inhomogeneous electromagnetic wave equation
Retarded spherical wave. The source of the wave occurs at time t'. The wavefront moves away from the source as time increases for t > t'. For advanced solutions, the wavefront moves backwards in time from the source t < t'.
In the case that there are no boundaries surrounding the sources, the solutions (cgs units) of the nonhomogeneous wave equations are
These solutions are known as the retarded Lorenz gauge potentials. They represent a superposition of spherical light waves traveling outward from the sources of the waves, from the present into the future.
There are also advanced solutions (cgs units)
and
These represent a superposition of spherical waves travelling from the future into the present.
James Clerk Maxwell, "A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London155, 459-512 (1865). (This article accompanied a December 8, 1864 presentation by Maxwell to the Royal Society.)
Tipler, Paul (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Electricity, Magnetism, Light, and Elementary Modern Physics (5th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN0-7167-0810-8.
Purcell, Edward M. (1985). Electricity and Magnetism. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Haus, Hermann A.; Melcher, James R. (1989). Electromagnetic Fields and Energy. Prentice-Hall. ISBN0-13-249020-X.
Banesh Hoffman (1983). Relativity and Its Roots. New York: Freeman.
David H. Staelin; Ann W. Morgenthaler; Jin Au Kong (1994). Electromagnetic Waves. Prentice-Hall. ISBN0-13-225871-4.
Stevens, Charles F. (1995). The Six Core Theories of Modern Physics. MIT Press. ISBN0-262-69188-4..
Graduate-level textbooks
Robert Wald, Advanced Classical Electromagnetism, (2022).
Jackson, John D. (1998). Classical Electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Wiley. ISBN0-471-30932-X.
Landau, L. D., The Classical Theory of Fields (Course of Theoretical Physics: Volume 2), (Butterworth-Heinemann: Oxford, 1987).
Maxwell, James C. (1954). A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Dover. ISBN0-486-60637-6.
Misner, Charles W.; Thorne, Kip S. (1970). Gravitation. New York: W.H. Freeman. ISBN0-7167-0344-0.. (Provides a treatment of Maxwell's equations in terms of differential forms.)
Vector Calculus & Further Topics
Schey, Harry Moritz (2005). Div, Grad, Curl, and all that: An informal text on vector calculus (4th ed.). Norton. ISBN978-0-393-92516-6.
Arfken et al., Mathematical Methods for Physicists, 6th edition (2005). Chapters 1 & 2 cover vector calculus and tensor calculus respectively.