Discover how James Clerk Maxwell unified electricity and magnetism into four elegant laws that power our modern world and define the very nature of light.

Maxwell took a mess of twenty complicated equations and distilled them into just four elegant statements that basically explain how our entire modern reality functions. He found the secret code for the universe’s invisible gears.
Maxwell’s equations are a set of four fundamental statements that unify electricity and magnetism into the single field of electromagnetism. Before James Clerk Maxwell’s work in the 1860s, electricity and magnetism were viewed as separate phenomena; however, Maxwell proved they are two sides of the same coin. These equations are considered the "secret code" for the universe’s invisible gears, providing the mathematical framework for light, radio waves, and the modern power grid.
According to Gauss’s Law for Magnetism, magnetic fields always function in continuous, unbreakable loops. Unlike electricity, where you can have a lone positive or negative charge (a monopole), magnetism always features a North and South pole together. If you cut a magnet in half, you simply create two smaller magnets, each with its own North and South pole. The math reflects this by showing that the net magnetic flux through a closed surface is always zero because every field line that exits must eventually re-enter.
Displacement current is a concept Maxwell introduced to explain how magnetic fields can be generated in a vacuum or an air gap, such as the space between the plates of a capacitor. He realized that it isn't just moving physical charges (like electrons in a wire) that create magnetism, but also a changing electric field. This theoretical leap completed the symmetry of electromagnetism—showing that if changing magnetism creates electricity, then changing electricity must create magnetism—and proved that a vacuum is a medium that can carry electromagnetic energy.
By combining his equations, Maxwell calculated the speed at which electromagnetic waves travel through a vacuum. He used two constants—the permittivity and permeability of free space—and discovered that the resulting speed was approximately 300,000 kilometers per second. Because this matched the known speed of light, he concluded that light is actually an electromagnetic wave. This discovery unified the fields of electricity, magnetism, and optics for the first time.
Special relativity reveals that electric and magnetic fields are not separate entities but are actually the same field viewed from different frames of reference. For example, a force that appears "magnetic" to a stationary observer is actually a "relativistic version" of an electric force to an observer moving alongside the charges. This happens because moving through the field causes space to contract, changing the perceived density of charges and demonstrating that magnetism is essentially a relativistic side effect of electricity in motion.
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