The Response of a Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic Dielectric and Magnetic Sphere Subjected to an External Field, DC or Low-Frequency AC, of Any Form
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Dielectric Sphere—Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic—Subjected to an External Electric Scalar Potential/Vector Field of Any Form
2.1. Inside Space of the Dielectric Sphere
2.2. Outside Space of the Dielectric Sphere
3. Magnetic Sphere—Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic—Subjected to an External Magnetic Scalar Pseudopotential/Vector Field of Any Form
3.1. Inside Space of the Magnetic Sphere
3.2. Outside Space of the Magnetic Sphere
4. Summary of Our Findings, Connection with the Literature and Utilization in Applications
4.1. Summary of Our Findings and Connection with the Literature
- (a)
- It eliminates all algebra, since we have the solutions beforehand, for any form of the external/user-applied potential/pseudopotential and field, by means of simple substitutions. However, prior to using these universal expressions to calculate the internal and total potential/pseudopotential, the external/user-applied ones should be obtained on the basis of the SH. To this end, the non-zero expansion coefficients— for the dielectric and for the magnetic case—and non-null modes should be obtained through relation (8). Moreover, the expansion coefficients— for the dielectric and for the magnetic case—can be calculated immediately from relations (31) and (57), respectively. Then, both the internal and total potentials can be calculated everywhere in space through the respective relations. For the dielectric case, relations (44) and (45) should be used to obtain and , respectively, inside the sphere, while relations (51) and (52) should be employed to obtain and , respectively, outside the sphere. For the magnetic case, relations (64) and (65) should be used to obtain the internal and total pseudopotentials, respectively, inside the sphere, while relations (71) and (72) should be employed to obtain the respective entities outside the sphere. Moreover, the respective electric/magnetic fields can be calculated by the already known potentials/pseudopotentials (dielectric sphere: relations (35), (38), (49) and (50); magnetic sphere: relations (53), (58), (69) and (70)). To this end, the vector functions and are needed for the non-null modes . These should not be calculated from scratch. Tables of and may be easily constructed for general use, without the need to recalculate each one of these functions whenever necessary. For instance, the functions for degrees up to can be found in [37], where only the polarization was considered at the inside space of the sphere.
- (b)
- It introduces an explicit closed-form relation for the depolarization factor, , i.e., relation (32). This physical parameter (see [58] and references therein) is important since it reveals how bound sources influence the internal/response field of the dielectric/magnetic sphere and how the latter relates to the external/user-applied one. We reveal that is degenerate on the order, , since it depends only on the degree, , of the external/user-applied mode . More importantly, we reveal the exact ways in which the expansion coefficients of both the internal/response and total potentials and fields depend on the depolarization factor, .
- (c)
- It also introduces an explicit closed-form relation for the extrinsic susceptibility, , of the studied dielectric and magnetic sphere, together with its direct connection with the intrinsic susceptibility, , of the parent material. Notice that depends solely on the endogenous properties of the parent material, so that it is an important parameter to be determined from experiments. However, in experiments, we have direct access only to the extrinsic susceptibility, , an exogenous property that relates to the shape and limited size of the studied specimen (see [58] and references therein). Thus, a reliable relation to translate the experimentally measured extrinsic susceptibility, , to the desired intrinsic one, , is urgently needed. Relations (37) and (55) for the dielectric and magnetic sphere, respectively, together with (32), serve this need in a direct way. Finally, we reveal that the extrinsic susceptibility is degenerate on the order, , since it depends only on the degree, , of the external/user-applied mode .
- (d)
- It minimizes the required effort and time, since we do not have to solve each particular problem from the beginning by applying the same, time-consuming algebraic manipulations whenever the external/user-applied field is different. The solutions are provided by the relations discussed above through immediate substitution. Thus, these relations are ready-to-use and hold for any form of the external/user-applied field, as discussed above.
- (e)
- It is absolutely reliable, since the solutions provided by the relations discussed above are obtained through the incorporation of all necessary boundary conditions from the very beginning. The reliability of our solutions is documented, analytically, through two representative cases (one for a dielectric and one for a magnetic sphere) discussed below. The solutions found by our relations, in practically a single step, are identical to those found through extensive algebraic calculations by standard mathematical approaches.
- (f)
- It can be used by non-experts in the field, since the user does not have to apply the extensive algebraic calculations required by standard mathematical approaches. Reliable solutions are provided by our ready-to-use relations by means of simple substitutions, as discussed above.
- (g)
- It can be employed in computational studies to minimize the requirements for resources. When entirely analytical solutions cannot be obtained by hand, our universal expressions can still be employed in a software-aided computational approach to find the desired solutions.
4.2. Utilization in Applications
4.2.1. Dielectric Case
4.2.2. Magnetic Case
4.2.3. Simulations for the Dielectric Case
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stamopoulos, D. The Response of a Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic Dielectric and Magnetic Sphere Subjected to an External Field, DC or Low-Frequency AC, of Any Form. Condens. Matter 2025, 10, 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/condmat10030048
Stamopoulos D. The Response of a Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic Dielectric and Magnetic Sphere Subjected to an External Field, DC or Low-Frequency AC, of Any Form. Condensed Matter. 2025; 10(3):48. https://doi.org/10.3390/condmat10030048
Chicago/Turabian StyleStamopoulos, Dimosthenis. 2025. "The Response of a Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic Dielectric and Magnetic Sphere Subjected to an External Field, DC or Low-Frequency AC, of Any Form" Condensed Matter 10, no. 3: 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/condmat10030048
APA StyleStamopoulos, D. (2025). The Response of a Linear, Homogeneous and Isotropic Dielectric and Magnetic Sphere Subjected to an External Field, DC or Low-Frequency AC, of Any Form. Condensed Matter, 10(3), 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/condmat10030048