Magnetic Field Lines
... • There are no actual magnetic field ‘lines’ in space. However, one can draw lines from the north pole to the south pole of a magnet to represent the direction of the magnetic force at every point in space. This is represented by following the direction the iron rods take within the Demonstrator. ...
... • There are no actual magnetic field ‘lines’ in space. However, one can draw lines from the north pole to the south pole of a magnet to represent the direction of the magnetic force at every point in space. This is represented by following the direction the iron rods take within the Demonstrator. ...
1. Current carrying wires in external magnetic fields
... We must have a changing magnetic field achieved by varying the distance of the conductor from the source of the magnetic field ( moving the wire or the magnets creating the field) The input is mechanical energy and the output is electrical energy which is the opposite of the motor effect. ...
... We must have a changing magnetic field achieved by varying the distance of the conductor from the source of the magnetic field ( moving the wire or the magnets creating the field) The input is mechanical energy and the output is electrical energy which is the opposite of the motor effect. ...
1818 ACC Chemistry
... Two wires can combine their magnetic fields in regular vector field addition, just like we saw with electric fields. ...
... Two wires can combine their magnetic fields in regular vector field addition, just like we saw with electric fields. ...
modello di descrizione delle singole attivita`formative
... conductors; electric potential and potential energy; capacitors; energy density of the electric field; D field. Electric current: electromotive force; Ohm, Joule, Kirchhoff’s laws. Magnetism: magnets and magnetic dipoles; Lorenz force; Ampère’s equivalence principle; 1st and 2nd Laplace formula; Amp ...
... conductors; electric potential and potential energy; capacitors; energy density of the electric field; D field. Electric current: electromotive force; Ohm, Joule, Kirchhoff’s laws. Magnetism: magnets and magnetic dipoles; Lorenz force; Ampère’s equivalence principle; 1st and 2nd Laplace formula; Amp ...
Comp Quest 22 SPI 0807.12.3
... not as high. As Earth rotates, the liquid in the core flows. Charged particles move, which makes a magnetic field. The strength of a magnetic field decreases rapidly with distance from the magnet. On the surface of the planet, Earth’s magnetic field is not very strong compared to that of a nearby el ...
... not as high. As Earth rotates, the liquid in the core flows. Charged particles move, which makes a magnetic field. The strength of a magnetic field decreases rapidly with distance from the magnet. On the surface of the planet, Earth’s magnetic field is not very strong compared to that of a nearby el ...
Force between magnets
Magnets exert forces and torques on each other due to the complex rules of electromagnetism. The forces of attraction field of magnets are due to microscopic currents of electrically charged electrons orbiting nuclei and the intrinsic magnetism of fundamental particles (such as electrons) that make up the material. Both of these are modeled quite well as tiny loops of current called magnetic dipoles that produce their own magnetic field and are affected by external magnetic fields. The most elementary force between magnets, therefore, is the magnetic dipole–dipole interaction. If all of the magnetic dipoles that make up two magnets are known then the net force on both magnets can be determined by summing up all these interactions between the dipoles of the first magnet and that of the second.It is always more convenient to model the force between two magnets as being due to forces between magnetic poles having magnetic charges 'smeared' over them. Such a model fails to account for many important properties of magnetism such as the relationship between angular momentum and magnetic dipoles. Further, magnetic charge does not exist. This model works quite well, though, in predicting the forces between simple magnets where good models of how the 'magnetic charge' is distributed is available.