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Similar to the question about the range of the validity of Coulomb's law, I am looking for references to literature that investigates the emirical bounds of the Maxwell-Faraday equation.

However, it seems more difficult to find sources than it is for Coulomb's law (where a good overview is e.g. provided in Jackson, section I.2). It might seem plausible that the laws are valid in the same range because electrodynamics is likely to break down as a whole but is there any evidence for that?

exchange
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    It's more generic than you're asking for, but you might be interested to read this wikipedia section I wrote into Maxwell's equations: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maxwell%27s_equations&oldid=810499549#Limitations_of_the_Maxwell_equations_as_a_theory_of_electromagnetism – Steve Byrnes Nov 22 '17 at 15:51
  • Great, I read it! The article on "non-classical light" you linked to was also interesting. One could add that charge can be created and destroyed in pairs in QED. – exchange Nov 22 '17 at 16:01
  • However, this does not yet really answer the question because I would need solid experimental bounds for the law. – exchange Nov 22 '17 at 21:55

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