Concept Summary
A sprit (σ) — the fundamental charge acceleration event — perturbs not just local electric fields but also the surrounding magnetic domain structure. Unlike classical magnetic field models that assume a fixed background permeability (), the Charge Admittance (CA) framework treats magnetic domains as dynamic responses to energy structuring events.
The response of the medium is encoded in variations in the admittance tensor , which shapes the electromagnetic field response in both direction and coherence.
Key Expression:
This states that variations in local field admittance are a function of:
- The divergence of the magnetic field (normally zero in Maxwell’s equations, but locally perturbed here)
- The curl of the electric field, which reflects induced magnetic activity during energy propagation
Interpretation:
- The change in the medium’s structural impedance,
, reflects a field lensing effect — similar to how optical lenses bend light.
- Regions of strong
indicate disrupted magnetic symmetry, typical near sprit (σ) events.
- The dynamic interplay between
and
causes magnetic domain “fuzzing,” realigning their topology.
Implication:
Instead of assuming magnetism as a background state, CA treats magnetic domains as secondary responses to charge-induced energy structuring. Magnetic inflection points act as impedance contours in the field — bending, distorting, or refocusing energy flow similar to wavefront behavior in optics.
This view provides a physical basis for:
- Magnetic memory
- Domain wall motion
- Hysteresis as structural lag in