Classical Electrodynamics in Terms of Direct Interparticle Action

From MaRDI portal
Publication:5791991


DOI10.1103/RevModPhys.21.425zbMath0034.27801WikidataQ27339422 ScholiaQ27339422MaRDI QIDQ5791991

John Archibald Wheeler, Richard P. Feynman

Publication date: 1949

Published in: Reviews of Modern Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)



Related Items

Canonical formalism of action-at-a-distance electrodynamics and many-particle potential among charged particles, Hamiltonian formalism for nonlocal Lagrangians, Multiple-time constants of the motion for manifestly Poincaré-invariant Newtonian-like equations of motion for point particles, A chiral spin theory in the framework of an invariant evolution parameter formalism, Some differential-difference equations containing both advance and retardation, Statistical origin of classical mechanics and quantum mechanics, Opposite Thermodynamic Arrows of Time, Unified approach to strings and vortices with soliton solutions, INTERFERENCE OF OUTGOING ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES GENERATED BY TWO POINT-LIKE SOURCES, Time displaced interactions: Classical dynamics and path integral quantization, NECESSITY OF SIMULTANEOUS CO-EXISTENCE OF INSTANTANEOUS AND RETARDED INTERACTIONS IN CLASSICAL ELECTRODYNAMICS, Statistical mechanics of the deformable droplets on flat surfaces, How to state necessary optimality conditions for control problems with deviating arguments?, Remarks on the Nature of Relativistic Particle Orbits, Regularization of the collision in the electromagnetic two-body problem, Relativistic Corrections in the Statistical Mechanics of Interacting Particles, Poincaré and gauge invariances in the constituent-string model, Quantisation of Hamiltonians from high-order Lagrangians, A class of physically acceptable, relativistic, many-particle Lagrangians, Electromagnetic Two-Body Problem, Resolution of causal paradoxes arising from opposing thermodynamic arrows of time, The rest-frame Darwin potential from the Lienard-Wiechert solution in the radiation gauge, The Classical Equations of Motion of Point Particles. I, Relativistic quantum dynamics of a system of interacting particles, The Classical Equations of Motion of Point Particles. II, A New Modification of Classical Electromagnetic Theory, Conservation Theorems in Modified Electrodynamics, Quantum Brownian representation for the quantum field modes, Wheeler propagator of the Lorentz invariant thermal energy propagation, Relativistic action-at-a-distance interactions: Lagrangian and Hamiltonian to terms of second order, Two mathematically equivalent versions of Maxwell's equations, Electrodynamics of balanced charges, What is (not) wrong with scalar gravity?, Retrocausality and quantum mechanics, On conceptual issues in classical electrodynamics: prospects and problems of an action-at-a-distance interpretation, Radiation damping in a gravitational field, Theory of gravitational perturbations in the fast motion approximation, Nonlinear equations for fields radiated by particles, Poincaré invariant Hamiltonian dynamics: Modelling multi-hadronic interactions in a phase space approach, Remarks on the compatibility of opposite arrows of time, Time and spacetime: The crystallizing block universe, Quantum wave equations and non-radiating electromagnetic sources, Retrocausality and quantum measurement, Homoclinic orbits for nonlinear difference equations containing both advance and retardation, Fokker's type action at a distance theory of gravitation, A discrete geometry: Speculations on a new framework for classical electrodynamics, The mathematical foundations of dimensional analysis and the question of fundamental units, Time-reversed information transmission, Relativistic and separable classical Hamiltonian particle dynamics, Geometrodynamics regained, Asymptotic and periodic boundary value problems of mixed FDEs and wave solutions of lattice differential equations, Can classical electrodynamics be renormalized?, Extending the stationary quantum mechanics of being to a nonstationary quantum theory of becoming and decaying, Born renormalization in classical Maxwell electrodynamics., Exact solutions of the relativistic many body problem, To believe or not believe in the \({\mathbf A}\) potential, that's a question. Flux quantization in autistic magnets. Prediction of a new effect, The two-body time-asymmetric relativistic models with field-type interaction, Classical action of charged and neutral particles with \(\text{spin }1/2\) and supersymmetric electrodynamics, How to state necessary optimality conditions for control problems with deviating arguments?, Variational methods for a class of nonlocal functionals, Time symmetry and cosmic age, Un-renormalized classical electromagnetism, Fundamental physics, On the origin of the anomalous precession of Mercury's perihelion, The sign of the gravitational force, Electrodynamics of direct interparticle action. I: The quantum mechanical response of the universe, On spinning particles, ITERATED KLEINIAN EQUATIONS, ELIMINATION OF THE FIELD DEGREES OF FREEDOM IN RELATIVISTIC SYSTEM OF POINTLIKE CHARGES, ELECTROMAGNETISM AND TIME-ASYMMETRY, Variational principle for the Wheeler–Feynman electrodynamics, Hamiltonian Formulation of Action-at-a-Distance in Electrodynamics, Electromagnetism and Gravitation: an Action-at-a-Distance Confluence, Geometric integration of the electromagnetic two-body problem, Canonical formalism for path-dependent Lagrangians. Coupling constant expansions, A delayed-advanced model for the electrodynamics two-body problem, Covariant Hamiltonian for the electromagnetic two-body problem, Interference in the radiation of two pointlike charges, Reassessing the Prospects for a Growing Block Model of the Universe, Four-momentum and angular momentum in classical electrodynamics, Null path model for classical interactions, Fokker–Wheeler–Feynman interactions without integrals, Lorentz-Invariant Equations of Motion of Point Masses in the General Theory of Relativity, A covariant extrapolation of the noncovariant two particle Wheeler–Feynman Hamiltonian from the Todorov equation and Dirac’s constraint mechanics, Derivation of many-body potential among charged particles in the S-matrix method, Unnamed Item



Cites Work