| > The originally published equations were "20 or so" because one equation was written for each scalar component. > Rewriting the equations in vector form reduces the number to the modern number. And if you use the differential form or 4d tensor notation they get reduced to 1 equation. Of course, for a lot of practical problems this is not very useful and it's better to work with the 3d vector form. > The variant with 4 equations is the simplified variant for vacuum, which is mostly useless, except for the purpose of studying the propagation of electromagnetic radiation in vacuum. > Instead of learning a large number of simplified variants of the Maxwell equations with limited applicability, it would have been much better if a manual would present since the beginning the only complete variant that is always true, which must be in integral form, as initially published by Maxwell. Here I have to strongly disagree. The version of Maxwell's equations that is fundamental and exactly correct [1] is the vacuum version. The ones with magnetization and displacement vectors are only approximations where you assume continuous materials that respond to fields in simple way. In truth, materials are made of atoms and are mostly vacuum: there is no actual displacement vector if you look close enough. Also the vacuum Maxwell equations are useful in many scenarios. For instance, that's how you compute the energy levels of Hydrogen atom or how you derive QED. Also, you have to start from them to derive the macroscopic versions with magnetization and displacement that you seem to like. [1] Well, up to non-linear quantum mechanic effects. |
Even today, there exists no consensus about which is the correct expression for the electromagnetic force. Most people are happy to use approximate expressions that are known to be valid only in restricted circumstances (like when the forces are caused by interactions with closed currents, or the forces are between stationary charges).
Moreover, when the vacuum equations are written in the simplified form present in most manuals, it is impossible to deduce how they should be applied to systems in motion, without adding extra assumptions, which usually are not listed together with the simple form of the equations (e.g. the curl and the divergence are written as depending on a system of coordinates, so it is not obvious how these coordinates can be defined, i.e. to which bodies they are attached).
While the vacuum equations are fundamental, they may be used as such only in few applications like quantum mechanics, where much more is needed beyond them.
In all practical applications of the Maxwell equations you must use the approximation of continuous media that can be characterized by averaged physical quantities that describe the free and bound carriers of electric charge. The useful form of the Maxwell equations is that complete with electric polarization, magnetization, electric current of the free carriers and electric charge of the free carriers. It is trivial to set all those quantities to zero, to retrieve the vacuum form of the equations.