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I am about to finish reading 'Introduction to Electrodynamics' by David Griffiths. Throughout the textbook, Griffiths makes frequent references to current literature (mostly articles from American Journal of Physics). So, I concluded that even though the theory of electrodynamics has a well established foundation, there might be some interesting "side problems" which are still open, hence the question.

noir1993
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    The issue I quote Griffiths talking about here might be an example, but people with more expertise may be able to offer more. – Hypnosifl Feb 23 '15 at 05:56
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    This question (v1) seems like a list question. – Qmechanic Feb 23 '15 at 08:39
  • Possible duplicate: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/65410/2451 – Qmechanic Feb 23 '15 at 08:41
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    Americal Journal of Physics used to be called "American Physics Teacher". A lot of the articles are about teaching issues or clever little problems based on basic material. – hft Feb 23 '15 at 08:57
  • @Qmechamic, I am more interested in what hft describes as "clever little problems based on basic material". I am not looking for a discussion on "problems" that are resolved by the corresponding quantum theory. That is why I mentioned "side problems". – noir1993 Feb 23 '15 at 10:53

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