Continuity equation Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Note that all the examples given below express the same idea (i.e. they are all really examples of the same concept, which happens to be the (stronger) local form of a conservation law).
In electromagnetic theory, the continuity equation is derived from two of Maxwell's equations. It states that the divergence of the current density is equal to the negative rate of change of the charge density,
Derivation
One of Maxwell's equations states that
- .
- ,
- .
- .
- ,
In fluid dynamics, a continuity equation is an equation
of conservation of mass. Its differential form is
See also: Euler equations, incompressible fluid.
Interpretation
Current density is the movement of charge density. The continuity equation says that if charge is moving out of a differential volume (i.e. divergence of current density is positive) then the amount of charge within that volume is going to decrease, so the rate of change of charge density is negative. Therefore the continuity equation amounts to a conservation of charge.
where is density, t is time, and u is fluid velocity.
In quantum mechanics, the conservation of probability also yields a continuity equation, mark P(x,t) as probability density and write
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