A Geometry-Based Route from Classical Fields to Quantum Mechanics
2026-01-20
One-Sentence Summary. We derive the Schrödinger equation and the emergence of Planck’s constant as the narrow-band limit of classical Maxwell wave dynamics on a toroidal standing mode.
Abstract. Maxwell’s equations for electromagnetism
in source-free vacuum predict discrete energies when an electromagnetic
field forms a self-confined toroidal standing pattern. For any component
of
the electromagnetic fields
, we isolate the forward-time spectral part, keep
all derivative terms exactly, and obtain —within a rigorously bounded,
bandwidth-squared remainder— the Schrödinger equation. Planck’s constant
and the inertial mass thus emerge not as fundamental constants, but as
geometric properties of the fundamental toroidal mode (
).
Keywords. Maxwell Equations, Toroidal Quantization, Analytic Signal, Emergent Quantum Mechanics, Rydberg Ladder
Quantum mechanics is usually introduced axiomatically. Maxwell’s equations, in contrast, were distilled from experiment—Coulomb’s law, Faraday’s induction, Ampère–Ørsted magnetism, and Hertz’s verification of electromagnetic waves.
Uniting these experimentally grounded field laws with quantum theory
shows that the Schrödinger equation follows from classical
electromagnetism alone. In this framework, mass is treated as an
electromagnetic object with field structure. Using the well-known
relation , an electromagnetic
account of inertia naturally extends to the broader principle that
energy attracts energy.
For any Cartesian component of
or
in vacuum,
the governing equation is:
We consider a self-confined electromagnetic mode with toroidal
topology. Let the major and minor radii be and
. Integer windings
impose the
resonance conditions:
The energy of a mode is given by:
This produces the energy ladder for
symmetric windings
, recovering the
Rydberg series structure purely from classical cavity harmonics.
We define the analytic (positive-time) signal:
which also satisfies Eq. (1). We extract the carrier frequency at the
fundamental mode :
Here, represents the slowly
varying envelope of the field.
Insert the derivatives of into Eq. (1) and divide
by
:
Because , the term
cancels
with the spatial Laplacian contribution
,
leaving an exact equation with a first-order time derivative.
Rearranging Eq. (4) yields:
For a mode with root-mean-square spectral width , the
second derivative term obeys:
We identify the emergent constants from the geometry of the fundamental mode:
Substituting these into the coefficient gives
. Discarding
the
term
yields the Schrödinger Equation:
The robustness of this result is confirmed via three alternative
routes: 1. Operator Factorization: Factoring the wave
operator and expanding about . 2.
Multiple-Scale Expansion: Introducing slow time
; matching
orders reproduces Eq. (8). 3. Poynting Vector
Averaging: Narrow-band averaging of the energy flow yields the
probability current.
All routes rely on the same bandwidth parameter and yield
identical definitions for
and
.
A doubly periodic electromagnetic mode, governed solely by Maxwell’s vacuum equations, contains the Schrödinger dynamics of a quantum object once its narrow-band envelope is isolated. Classical electrodynamics therefore supplies the formal and numerical content usually attributed to quantum postulates.
Carrier Extraction
The process of “extracting the carrier” is formally equivalent to demodulation.