* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Magnets - mrzimmerman.org
Electricity wikipedia , lookup
History of electrochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Neutron magnetic moment wikipedia , lookup
Lorentz force wikipedia , lookup
History of electromagnetic theory wikipedia , lookup
Electromagnetism wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic nanoparticles wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic monopole wikipedia , lookup
Hall effect wikipedia , lookup
Scanning SQUID microscope wikipedia , lookup
Friction-plate electromagnetic couplings wikipedia , lookup
Electric machine wikipedia , lookup
Superconductivity wikipedia , lookup
Magnetohydrodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Earth's magnetic field wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic field wikipedia , lookup
Magnetoreception wikipedia , lookup
Multiferroics wikipedia , lookup
Magnetochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic core wikipedia , lookup
Galvanometer wikipedia , lookup
Faraday paradox wikipedia , lookup
Eddy current wikipedia , lookup
Electromagnet wikipedia , lookup
Force between magnets wikipedia , lookup
Magnets History of Magnetism • The Chinese discovered the magnetic compass as early as 200 BC. At first fortune-tellers used it. Later people realised that it was a way to find the direction of North and South. History of Magnetism • The ancient Greeks knew that the lodestone or magnetite attracted iron towards it. It is known that the Vikings used a lodestone to navigate. Later at the end of the twelfth century Europeans were using this simple compass to aid navigation. History of Magnetism • During the 16th century Sir William Gilbert discovered that the properties of the lodestone could be transferred to ordinary pieces of iron by rubbing them with a lodestone. What is a Magnet The first magnets were made of iron. These days they are can be made from: • iron • nickel • copper • cobalt • aluminum • . What do Magnets do? They attract certain materials: • iron • steel • nickel • cobalt What do Magnets do? • Magnetic materials are attracted to the poles of the magnet. • On a bar magnet the poles are at either end of the magnet. • Poles occur in pairs of equal strength. • One pole - North - N pole- pointing roughly to the Earth's North pole. • Other pole - South - S pole What do Magnets do? • Like poles repel Unlike poles attract • Force between magnetic poles decreases as their separation increases. • An unmagnetized magnet material would be attracted to both poles. Magnetic Field • A magnetic field is the area around a magnet in which a force is experienced. • • Magnetic Field of a “U” Magnet Like Poles have Fields that Repel Unlike Poles have Field that attract The Earth has a magnetic Field Theory of Magnetism • If a magnetic piece of steel rod is cut into smaller pieces, each piece is a magnet with a N or a S pole. • Therefore a magnet can be said to be made of lots of "tiny" molecular-sized magnets all lined up with their N poles pointing in the same direction. Magnetic Theory If you split a magnet in half? If you split a magnet in half? If you split a magnet in half? Can Magnet Be Destroyed? • • • • hammering a magnet heating dropping a magnet demagnetizing by using reduced alternating current through a coil of wire wrapped round a magnet Can a Magnet be made? • When a piece of unmagnetised magnetic material touches or is brought near to the pole of a permanent magnet, it becomes a magnet itself. • The magnetism is induced. Electromagnets • A coil of wire with electricity flowing through it acts as a bar magnet. Electromagnet • Placing a piece of iron into the coil induces a magnetic effect in the iron when the current is flowing in the coil and so turning it into an electro-magnet • you can turn the magnet on and off by using a switch to turn the current and off. Increasing the strength of Electromagnets • increasing number of coils • increasing the current • using an iron core (iron magnetizes and demagnetizes quickly, whereas steel takes time to magnetize and demagnetize) Use of Electromagnets • • • • • Electric generators Electric Motors Loudspeakers Telephones Tapes - flexible magnets