Course Syllabus for PHY 424 – Electrodynamics I – Fall... I. Course Information
... o Students are expected to demonstrate academic integrity in all work related to this course. Cheating of any form will not be tolerated. Any incidence of academic dishonesty will result in both course sanctions and formal notification of the College of Arts & Sciences. See: http://academicintegrity ...
... o Students are expected to demonstrate academic integrity in all work related to this course. Cheating of any form will not be tolerated. Any incidence of academic dishonesty will result in both course sanctions and formal notification of the College of Arts & Sciences. See: http://academicintegrity ...
Pertti Mäkelä The Catholic University of America
... CRs diffuse through the turbulent interstellar magnetic fields in the interstellar medium (ISM) in the Galaxy (galactic disc + halo). CRs are also deflected multiple times by the randomly oriented magnetic fields (B ∼ 3 µG). Suffer energy losses and produce spallation secondary particles in interac ...
... CRs diffuse through the turbulent interstellar magnetic fields in the interstellar medium (ISM) in the Galaxy (galactic disc + halo). CRs are also deflected multiple times by the randomly oriented magnetic fields (B ∼ 3 µG). Suffer energy losses and produce spallation secondary particles in interac ...
Magnetic Field - Purdue Physics
... In a practical motor, a solenoid is used instead of a single loop Additional set-up is needed to keep the shaft rotating Electric generators are motors in reverse A generator produces an electric current by rotating a coil between the poles of the magnet Section 20.10 ...
... In a practical motor, a solenoid is used instead of a single loop Additional set-up is needed to keep the shaft rotating Electric generators are motors in reverse A generator produces an electric current by rotating a coil between the poles of the magnet Section 20.10 ...
Michael Faraday (1791-1867) The laws of electricity and magnetism
... When a coil is rotated in a magnetic field, an induced current appears in it. This is how electricity is generated. Some external source of energy is needed to rotate the turbine which turns the coil. ...
... When a coil is rotated in a magnetic field, an induced current appears in it. This is how electricity is generated. Some external source of energy is needed to rotate the turbine which turns the coil. ...
Magnetic Field
... • Step 4. The coil rotates until its poles are opposite the poles of the permanent magnet. • The commutator reverses the current, and the coil keeps rotating. ...
... • Step 4. The coil rotates until its poles are opposite the poles of the permanent magnet. • The commutator reverses the current, and the coil keeps rotating. ...
Magnetic field and convection in Betelgeuse
... Origin of small-scale (intranetwork) magnetic elements : • decay of active regions ? But: no or very limited variation over solar cycle • small-scale dynamo (Meneguzzi & Pouquet 1989, Cattaneo 1999 etc) ? ...
... Origin of small-scale (intranetwork) magnetic elements : • decay of active regions ? But: no or very limited variation over solar cycle • small-scale dynamo (Meneguzzi & Pouquet 1989, Cattaneo 1999 etc) ? ...
Lecture Notes 18: Magnetic Monopoles/Magnetic Charges; Magnetic Flux Quantization, Dirac Quantization Condition, Coulomb/Lorentz Force Laws for Electric/Magnetic Charges, Duality Transformations
... ϕ of all electric and magnetic phenomena, which leaves all of the laws associated with the time!!! physics of electromagnetism unchanged – it’s a “knob” that allows us to rotate space Electromagnetism is invariant under a duality transformation. By carrying out a duality transformation, we simultane ...
... ϕ of all electric and magnetic phenomena, which leaves all of the laws associated with the time!!! physics of electromagnetism unchanged – it’s a “knob” that allows us to rotate space Electromagnetism is invariant under a duality transformation. By carrying out a duality transformation, we simultane ...
Lenz`s Law
... As the conducting loop moves in a region with no field, there is no current in the loop since the magnetic flux through the loop is constant (zero). As the loop enters the region of constant field, the magnetic flux through the loop changes so there is an induced current in the loop with a direction ...
... As the conducting loop moves in a region with no field, there is no current in the loop since the magnetic flux through the loop is constant (zero). As the loop enters the region of constant field, the magnetic flux through the loop changes so there is an induced current in the loop with a direction ...
Lesson Plan
... Figure 1. A needle is normally not a magnet because its magnetic domains are not aligned (left). When a needle contacts a permanent magnet for an extended time (or is rubbed along a permanent magnet), its magnet domains align in the same direction, forming a temporary magnet with a magnetic field ( ...
... Figure 1. A needle is normally not a magnet because its magnetic domains are not aligned (left). When a needle contacts a permanent magnet for an extended time (or is rubbed along a permanent magnet), its magnet domains align in the same direction, forming a temporary magnet with a magnetic field ( ...
Ferrofluid
A ferrofluid (portmanteau of ferromagnetic and fluid) is a liquid that becomes strongly magnetized in the presence of a magnetic field.Ferrofluid was invented in 1963 by NASA's Steve Papell as a liquid rocket fuel that could be drawn toward a pump inlet in a weightless environment by applying a magnetic field.Ferrofluids are colloidal liquids made of nanoscale ferromagnetic, or ferrimagnetic, particles suspended in a carrier fluid (usually an organic solvent or water). Each tiny particle is thoroughly coated with a surfactant to inhibit clumping. Large ferromagnetic particles can be ripped out of the homogeneous colloidal mixture, forming a separate clump of magnetic dust when exposed to strong magnetic fields. The magnetic attraction of nanoparticles is weak enough that the surfactant's Van der Waals force is sufficient to prevent magnetic clumping or agglomeration. Ferrofluids usually do not retain magnetization in the absence of an externally applied field and thus are often classified as ""superparamagnets"" rather than ferromagnets.The difference between ferrofluids and magnetorheological fluids (MR fluids) is the size of the particles. The particles in a ferrofluid primarily consist of nanoparticles which are suspended by Brownian motion and generally will not settle under normal conditions. MR fluid particles primarily consist of micrometre-scale particles which are too heavy for Brownian motion to keep them suspended, and thus will settle over time because of the inherent density difference between the particle and its carrier fluid. These two fluids have very different applications as a result.