Direct derivation of Lienard Wiechert potentials, Maxwell's equations and Lorentz force from Coulomb's law
Hrvoje Dodig

TL;DR
This paper derives Maxwell's equations, Lienard Wiechert potentials, and the Lorentz force solely from Coulomb's law and the concept of finite propagation speed, without relying on special relativity.
Contribution
It provides a novel derivation of fundamental electrodynamic laws from basic principles, eliminating the need for Lorentz transformations.
Findings
Maxwell's equations derived from Coulomb's law and finite propagation speed.
Lorentz force obtained from energy conservation principles.
Lienard Wiechert potentials formulated without special relativity.
Abstract
In 19th century Maxwell derived Maxwell equations from the knowledge of three experimental physical laws: the Coulomb's law, the Ampere's force law and Faraday's law of induction. However, theoretical basis for Ampere's force law and Faraday's law remains unknown to this day. Furthermore, the Lorentz force is considered as experimental phenomena, the theoretical foundation of this force is still unknown. To answer these fundamental theoretical questions, we derive Lienard Wiechert potentials, Maxwell's equations and Lorentz force from two simple postulates: (a) when all charges are at rest the Coulomb's force acts between the charges, and (b) that disturbances caused by charge in motion propagate away from the source with finite velocity. The special relativity was not used in our derivations nor the Lorentz transformation. In effect, it was shown all the electrodynamic laws,…
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