Hello everybody, my name is Professor Seungbum Hong at KAIST, and to my right side, I have my teaching assistant, Melodie Glasser. We are here to introduce you to lecture series on electrodynamics and its applications. So, this is myself, I'm a KAIST professor, alumni in KAIST, as well as I am a visiting scientist at Argonne National Lab which is located near Chicago, and to the right side, you see the picture of my teaching assistant, Melodie Glasser, and she's a student at KAIST, Masters course, and she's an alumni of Colorado School of Mines. So, this is the logo of my university as well as the symbol, and it is located in the mid western part of South Korea. So in this slide, we're going to show you some of the big shots in the field of electrodynamics which covered the interactions between electric and magnetic systems. So, from the left side you can see Alessandro Volta, George Simon Ohm, and Michael Faraday, followed by James Maxwell, Henry Lorentz and Richard Feynman. You can see Volta produced first large electric current and his name is in the unit of voltage, Volt, and George Simon Ohm experimented with resistance and he has published the very important law, V equals IR, and you can see the unit of resistance is ohm after his name. Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction. So, his last name is also used in the unit of Farad, as you can see. Now Melodie, among those persons, among those big shots, who is your favorite? Well, the first thing, I would say Michael Faraday because he is at the junction of what we're about to study which is coupled electromagnetism, right? Yes. Then also I really like Richard Feynman because his lectures are pretty good as well. Perfect. Okay, what's your choice? I'm very curious. So, the overall structure of lecture slides is shown in this table. We will have four lecture courses. The first course will be on an introduction to electrodynamics, which will have a course duration of about five weeks and each lecture series will last for the same amount of time, and you can see after this one, we have electrodynamics: Analysis of electric fields, and then electrodynamics: Electric and magnetic fields, and the last one but then not the least one which is electrodynamics: in-depth solutions for Maxwell's equations. So, the scope of the first lecture series that you're about to see consists of five parts as is written here. The first one being electrical forces and quantum mechanical effects. That are the two big pillars to create all the materials in the world. So, it will be responsible for the structure of the materials that you're dealing with. Then we will move on to concepts of field, flux and circulation. They will be the building blocks to understand the Maxwell's equations, and we will cover vector calculus including Divergence, Curl, and Gauss and Stokes' theorems. Then we will discuss about electrostatics and Gauss' Law, and the last part, we will try to apply Gauss Law and understand electric shielding. So, with that, we want you to enjoy the journey to electrodynamics. Yeah. Thank you.