We know that one of Maxwell's equation in Time-Domain is: $$\nabla \times \vec{E} = - \partial \vec{B}/\partial t$$ The typical steps to convert into Phasor-Domain starts with:
Let $$E(x,y,z,t) = Re[E_s(x,y,z)e^{j\omega t}]$$ And after some substitutions we arrive at: $$Re[\nabla \times \vec{E_s}e^{j\omega t}] = -Re[j \omega \vec{B_s}e^{j\omega t}]$$
Now in most references they just equate the inside parts arriving at the answer correctly.
What I don't understand, in mathematics, when Re[z1] = Re[z2], this does not imply that z1 = z2. But in the above equation this is essentially what we have done.
Can someone explain it?
{I know it has an answer here: Phasor form of Maxwell's Equations, but I did not understand the answer, so if someone can explain it more simply, I would be grateful.}
A side question: What is the transformation used in phasor form? Is it related to Fourier Transform?