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Magnetic field

A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents,[1]: ch1 [2] and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to the magnetic field.[1]: ch13 [3]: 278  A permanent magnet's magnetic field pulls on ferromagnetic materials such as iron, and attracts or repels other magnets. In addition, a nonuniform magnetic field exerts minuscule forces on "nonmagnetic" materials by three other magnetic effects: paramagnetism, diamagnetism, and antiferromagnetism, although these forces are usually so small they can only be detected by laboratory equipment. Magnetic fields surround magnetized materials, and are created by electric currents such as those used in electromagnets, and by electric fields varying in time. Since both strength and direction of a magnetic field may vary with location, it is described mathematically by a function assigning a vector to each point of space, called a vector field.

The shape of the magnetic field produced by a horseshoe magnet is revealed by the orientation of iron filings sprinkled on a piece of paper above the magnet.

In electromagnetics, the term "magnetic field" is used for two distinct but closely related vector fields denoted by the symbols B and H. In the International System of Units, the unit of H, magnetic field strength, is the ampere per meter (A/m).[4]: 22  The unit of B, the magnetic flux density, is the tesla (in SI base units: kilogram per second2 per ampere),[4]: 21  which is equivalent to newton per meter per ampere. H and B differ in how they account for magnetization. In vacuum, the two fields are related through the vacuum permeability, ; but in a magnetized material, the quantities on each side of this equation differ by the magnetization field of the material.

Magnetic fields are produced by moving electric charges and the intrinsic magnetic moments of elementary particles associated with a fundamental quantum property, their spin.[5][1]: ch1  Magnetic fields and electric fields are interrelated and are both components of the electromagnetic force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature.

Magnetic fields are used throughout modern technology, particularly in electrical engineering and electromechanics. Rotating magnetic fields are used in both electric motors and generators. The interaction of magnetic fields in electric devices such as transformers is conceptualized and investigated as magnetic circuits. Magnetic forces give information about the charge carriers in a material through the Hall effect. The Earth produces its own magnetic field, which shields the Earth's ozone layer from the solar wind and is important in navigation using a compass.

Description

The force on an electric charge depends on its location, speed, and direction; two vector fields are used to describe this force.[1]: ch1  The first is the electric field, which describes the force acting on a stationary charge and gives the component of the force that is independent of motion. The magnetic field, in contrast, describes the component of the force that is proportional to both the speed and direction of charged particles.[1]: ch13  The field is defined by the Lorentz force law and is, at each instant, perpendicular to both the motion of the charge and the force it experiences.

There are two different, but closely related vector fields which are both sometimes called the "magnetic field" written B and H.[note 1] While both the best names for these fields and exact interpretation of what these fields represent has been the subject of long running debate, there is wide agreement about how the underlying physics work.[6] Historically, the term "magnetic field" was reserved for H while using other terms for B, but many recent textbooks use the term "magnetic field" to describe B as well as or in place of H.[note 2] There are many alternative names for both (see sidebar).

The B-field

Finding the magnetic force
 
A charged particle that is moving with velocity v in a magnetic field B will feel a magnetic force F. Since the magnetic force always pulls sideways to the direction of motion, the particle moves in a circle.
 
Since these three vectors are related to each other by a cross product, the direction of this force can be found using the right hand rule.
Alternative names for B[7]
  • Magnetic flux density[4]: 138 
  • Magnetic induction[8]
  • Magnetic field (ambiguous)

The magnetic field vector B at any point can be defined as the vector that, when used in the Lorentz force law, correctly predicts the force on a charged particle at that point:[9][10]: 204 

Lorentz force law (vector form, SI units)

 

Here F is the force on the particle, q is the particle's electric charge, v, is the particle's velocity, and × denotes the cross product. The direction of force on the charge can be determined by a mnemonic known as the right-hand rule (see the figure).[note 3] Using the right hand, pointing the thumb in the direction of the current, and the fingers in the direction of the magnetic field, the resulting force on the charge points outwards from the palm. The force on a negatively charged particle is in the opposite direction. If both the speed and the charge are reversed then the direction of the force remains the same. For that reason a magnetic field measurement (by itself) cannot distinguish whether there is a positive charge moving to the right or a negative charge moving to the left. (Both of these cases produce the same current.) On the other hand, a magnetic field combined with an electric field can distinguish between these, see Hall effect below.

The first term in the Lorentz equation is from the theory of electrostatics, and says that a particle of charge q in an electric field E experiences an electric force:

 

The second term is the magnetic force:[10]

 

Using the definition of the cross product, the magnetic force can also be written as a scalar equation:[9]: 357 

 

where Fmagnetic, v, and B are the scalar magnitude of their respective vectors, and θ is the angle between the velocity of the particle and the magnetic field. The vector B is defined as the vector field necessary to make the Lorentz force law correctly describe the motion of a charged particle. In other words,[9]: 173–4 

[T]he command, "Measure the direction and magnitude of the vector B at such and such a place," calls for the following operations: Take a particle of known charge q. Measure the force on q at rest, to determine E. Then measure the force on the particle when its velocity is v; repeat with v in some other direction. Now find a B that makes the Lorentz force law fit all these results—that is the magnetic field at the place in question.

The B field can also be defined by the torque on a magnetic dipole, m.[11]: 174 

Magnetic torque (vector form, SI units)

 

The SI unit of B is tesla (symbol: T).[note 4] The Gaussian-cgs unit of B is the gauss (symbol: G). (The conversion is 1 T ≘ 10000 G.[12][13]) One nanotesla corresponds to 1 gamma (symbol: γ).[13]

The H-field

Alternative names for H[7]
  • Magnetic field intensity[8]
  • Magnetic field strength[4]: 139 
  • Magnetic field
  • Magnetizing field

The magnetic H field is defined:[10]: 269 [11]: 192 [1]: ch36 

Definition of the H field (vector form, SI units)

 

Where   is the vacuum permeability, and M is the magnetization vector. In a vacuum, B and H are proportional to each other. Inside a material they are different (see H and B inside and outside magnetic materials). The SI unit of the H-field is the ampere per metre (A/m),[14] and the CGS unit is the oersted (Oe).[12][9]: 286

Measurement

An instrument used to measure the local magnetic field is known as a magnetometer. Important classes of magnetometers include using induction magnetometers (or search-coil magnetometers) which measure only varying magnetic fields, rotating coil magnetometers, Hall effect magnetometers, NMR magnetometers, SQUID magnetometers, and fluxgate magnetometers. The magnetic fields of distant astronomical objects are measured through their effects on local charged particles. For instance, electrons spiraling around a field line produce synchrotron radiation that is detectable in radio waves. The finest precision for a magnetic field measurement was attained by Gravity Probe B at 5 aT (5×10−18 T).[15]

Visualization

Visualizing magnetic fields
 
 
Left: the direction of magnetic field lines represented by iron filings sprinkled on paper placed above a bar magnet.
Right: compass needles point in the direction of the local magnetic field, towards a magnet's south pole and away from its north pole.

The field can be visualized by a set of magnetic field lines, that follow the direction of the field at each point. The lines can be constructed by measuring the strength and direction of the magnetic field at a large number of points (or at every point in space). Then, mark each location with an arrow (called a vector) pointing in the direction of the local magnetic field with its magnitude proportional to the strength of the magnetic field. Connecting these arrows then forms a set of magnetic field lines. The direction of the magnetic field at any point is parallel to the direction of nearby field lines, and the local density of field lines can be made proportional to its strength. Magnetic field lines are like streamlines in fluid flow, in that they represent a continuous distribution, and a different resolution would show more or fewer lines.

An advantage of using magnetic field lines as a representation is that many laws of magnetism (and electromagnetism) can be stated completely and concisely using simple concepts such as the "number" of field lines through a surface. These concepts can be quickly "translated" to their mathematical form. For example, the number of field lines through a given surface is the surface integral of the magnetic field.[9]: 237 

Various phenomena "display" magnetic field lines as though the field lines were physical phenomena. For example, iron filings placed in a magnetic field form lines that correspond to "field lines".[note 5] Magnetic field "lines" are also visually displayed in polar auroras, in which plasma particle dipole interactions create visible streaks of light that line up with the local direction of Earth's magnetic field.

Field lines can be used as a qualitative tool to visualize magnetic forces. In ferromagnetic substances like iron and in plasmas, magnetic forces can be understood by imagining that the field lines exert a tension, (like a rubber band) along their length, and a pressure perpendicular to their length on neighboring field lines. "Unlike" poles of magnets attract because they are linked by many field lines; "like" poles repel because their field lines do not meet, but run parallel, pushing on each other.

Magnetic field of permanent magnets

Permanent magnets are objects that produce their own persistent magnetic fields. They are made of ferromagnetic materials, such as iron and nickel, that have been magnetized, and they have both a north and a south pole.

The magnetic field of permanent magnets can be quite complicated, especially near the magnet. The magnetic field of a small[note 6] straight magnet is proportional to the magnet's strength (called its magnetic dipole moment m). The equations are non-trivial and also depend on the distance from the magnet and the orientation of the magnet. For simple magnets, m points in the direction of a line drawn from the south to the north pole of the magnet. Flipping a bar magnet is equivalent to rotating its m by 180 degrees.

The magnetic field of larger magnets can be obtained by modeling them as a collection of a large number of small magnets called dipoles each having their own m. The magnetic field produced by the magnet then is the net magnetic field of these dipoles; any net force on the magnet is a result of adding up the forces on the individual dipoles.

There were two simplified models for the nature of these dipoles. These two models produce two different magnetic fields, H and B. Outside a material, though, the two are identical (to a multiplicative constant) so that in many cases the distinction can be ignored. This is particularly true for magnetic fields, such as those due to electric currents, that are not generated by magnetic materials.

A realistic model of magnetism is more complicated than either of these models; neither model fully explains why materials are magnetic. The monopole model has no experimental support. Ampere's model explains some, but not all of a material's magnetic moment. Like Ampere's model predicts, the motion of electrons within an atom are connected to those electrons' orbital magnetic dipole moment, and these orbital moments do contribute to the magnetism seen at the macroscopic level. However, the motion of electrons is not classical, and the spin magnetic moment of electrons (which is not explained by either model) is also a significant contribution to the total moment of magnets.

Magnetic pole model

 
The magnetic pole model: two opposing poles, North (+) and South (−), separated by a distance d produce a H-field (lines).

Historically, early physics textbooks would model the force and torques between two magnets as due to magnetic poles repelling or attracting each other in the same manner as the Coulomb force between electric charges. At the microscopic level, this model contradicts the experimental evidence, and the pole model of magnetism is no longer the typical way to introduce the concept.[10]: 204  However, it is still sometimes used as a macroscopic model for ferromagnetism due to its mathematical simplicity.[16]

In this model, a magnetic H-field is produced by fictitious magnetic charges that are spread over the surface of each pole. These magnetic charges are in fact related to the magnetization field M. The H-field, therefore, is analogous to the electric field E, which starts at a positive electric charge and ends at a negative electric charge. Near the north pole, therefore, all H-field lines point away from the north pole (whether inside the magnet or out) while near the south pole all H-field lines point toward the south pole (whether inside the magnet or out). Too, a north pole feels a force in the direction of the H-field while the force on the south pole is opposite to the H-field.

In the magnetic pole model, the elementary magnetic dipole m is formed by two opposite magnetic poles of pole strength qm separated by a small distance vector d, such that m = qmd. The magnetic pole model predicts correctly the field H both inside and outside magnetic materials, in particular the fact that H is opposite to the magnetization field M inside a permanent magnet.

Since it is based on the fictitious idea of a magnetic charge density, the pole model has limitations. Magnetic poles cannot exist apart from each other as electric charges can, but always come in north–south pairs. If a magnetized object is divided in half, a new pole appears on the surface of each piece, so each has a pair of complementary poles. The magnetic pole model does not account for magnetism that is produced by electric currents, nor the inherent connection between angular momentum and magnetism.

The pole model usually treats magnetic charge as a mathematical abstraction, rather than a physical property of particles. However, a magnetic monopole is a hypothetical particle (or class of particles) that physically has only one magnetic pole (either a north pole or a south pole). In other words, it would possess a "magnetic charge" analogous to an electric charge. Magnetic field lines would start or end on magnetic monopoles, so if they exist, they would give exceptions to the rule that magnetic field lines neither start nor end. Some theories (such as Grand Unified Theories) have predicted the existence of magnetic monopoles, but so far, none have been observed.

Amperian loop model

The Amperian loop model
 
 
A current loop (ring) that goes into the page at the x and comes out at the dot produces a B-field (lines). As the radius of the current loop shrinks, the fields produced become identical to an abstract "magnetostatic dipole" (represented by an arrow pointing to the right).

In the model developed by Ampere, the elementary magnetic dipole that makes up all magnets is a sufficiently small Amperian loop with current I and loop area A. The dipole moment of this loop is m = IA.

These magnetic dipoles produce a magnetic B-field.

The magnetic field of a magnetic dipole is depicted in the figure. From outside, the ideal magnetic dipole is identical to that of an ideal electric dipole of the same strength. Unlike the electric dipole, a magnetic dipole is properly modeled as a current loop having a current I and an area a. Such a current loop has a magnetic moment of

 
where the direction of m is perpendicular to the area of the loop and depends on the direction of the current using the right-hand rule. An ideal magnetic dipole is modeled as a real magnetic dipole whose area a has been reduced to zero and its current I increased to infinity such that the product m = Ia is finite. This model clarifies the connection between angular momentum and magnetic moment, which is the basis of the Einstein–de Haas effect rotation by magnetization and its inverse, the Barnett effect or magnetization by rotation.[17] Rotating the loop faster (in the same direction) increases the current and therefore the magnetic moment, for example.

Interactions with magnets

Force between magnets

Specifying the force between two small magnets is quite complicated because it depends on the strength and orientation of both magnets and their distance and direction relative to each other. The force is particularly sensitive to rotations of the magnets due to magnetic torque. The force on each magnet depends on its magnetic moment and the magnetic field[note 7] of the other.

To understand the force between magnets, it is useful to examine the magnetic pole model given above. In this model, the H-field of one magnet pushes and pulls on both poles of a second magnet. If this H-field is the same at both poles of the second magnet then there is no net force on that magnet since the force is opposite for opposite poles. If, however, the magnetic field of the first magnet is nonuniform (such as the H near one of its poles), each pole of the second magnet sees a different field and is subject to a different force. This difference in the two forces moves the magnet in the direction of increasing magnetic field and may also cause a net torque.

This is a specific example of a general rule that magnets are attracted (or repulsed depending on the orientation of the magnet) into regions of higher magnetic field. Any non-uniform magnetic field, whether caused by permanent magnets or electric currents, exerts a force on a small magnet in this way.

The details of the Amperian loop model are different and more complicated but yield the same result: that magnetic dipoles are attracted/repelled into regions of higher magnetic field. Mathematically, the force on a small magnet having a magnetic moment m due to a magnetic field B is:[18]: Eq. 11.42 

 

where the gradient is the change of the quantity m · B per unit distance and the direction is that of maximum increase of m · B. The dot product m · B = mBcos(θ), where m and B represent the magnitude of the m and B vectors and θ is the angle between them. If m is in the same direction as B then the dot product is positive and the gradient points "uphill" pulling the magnet into regions of higher B-field (more strictly larger m · B). This equation is strictly only valid for magnets of zero size, but is often a good approximation for not too large magnets. The magnetic force on larger magnets is determined by dividing them into smaller regions each having their own m then summing up the forces on each of these very small regions.

Magnetic torque on permanent magnets

If two like poles of two separate magnets are brought near each other, and one of the magnets is allowed to turn, it promptly rotates to align itself with the first. In this example, the magnetic field of the stationary magnet creates a magnetic torque on the magnet that is free to rotate. This magnetic torque τ tends to align a magnet's poles with the magnetic field lines. A compass, therefore, turns to align itself with Earth's magnetic field.

Torque on a dipole
 
In the pole model of a dipole, an H field (to right) causes equal but opposite forces on a N pole (+q) and a S pole (q) creating a torque.
 
Equivalently, a B field induces the same torque on a current loop with the same magnetic dipole moment.

In terms of the pole model, two equal and opposite magnetic charges experiencing the same H also experience equal and opposite forces. Since these equal and opposite forces are in different locations, this produces a torque proportional to the distance (perpendicular to the force) between them. With the definition of m as the pole strength times the distance between the poles, this leads to τ = μ0 m H sin θ, where μ0 is a constant called the vacuum permeability, measuring ×10−7 V·s/(A·m) and θ is the angle between H and m.

Mathematically, the torque τ on a small magnet is proportional both to the applied magnetic field and to the magnetic moment m of the magnet:

 

where × represents the vector cross product. This equation includes all of the qualitative information included above. There is no torque on a magnet if m is in the same direction as the magnetic field, since the cross product is zero for two vectors that are in the same direction. Further, all other orientations feel a torque that twists them toward the direction of magnetic field.

Interactions with electric currents

Currents of electric charges both generate a magnetic field and feel a force due to magnetic B-fields.

Magnetic field due to moving charges and electric currents

 
Right hand grip rule: a current flowing in the direction of the white arrow produces a magnetic field shown by the red arrows.

All moving charged particles produce magnetic fields. Moving point charges, such as electrons, produce complicated but well known magnetic fields that depend on the charge, velocity, and acceleration of the particles.[19]

Magnetic field lines form in concentric circles around a cylindrical current-carrying conductor, such as a length of wire. The direction of such a magnetic field can be determined by using the "right-hand grip rule" (see figure at right). The strength of the magnetic field decreases with distance from the wire. (For an infinite length wire the strength is inversely proportional to the distance.)

 
A Solenoid with electric current running through it behaves like a magnet.

Bending a current-carrying wire into a loop concentrates the magnetic field inside the loop while weakening it outside. Bending a wire into multiple closely spaced loops to form a coil or "solenoid" enhances this effect. A device so formed around an iron core may act as an electromagnet, generating a strong, well-controlled magnetic field. An infinitely long cylindrical electromagnet has a uniform magnetic field inside, and no magnetic field outside. A finite length electromagnet produces a magnetic field that looks similar to that produced by a uniform permanent magnet, with its strength and polarity determined by the current flowing through the coil.

The magnetic field generated by a steady current I (a constant flow of electric charges, in which charge neither accumulates nor is depleted at any point)[note 8] is described by the Biot–Savart law:[20]: 224 

 
where the integral sums over the wire length where vector d is the vector line element with direction in the same sense as the current I, μ0 is the magnetic constant, r is the distance between the location of d and the location where the magnetic field is calculated, and is a unit vector in the direction of r. For example, in the case of a sufficiently long, straight wire, this becomes:
 
where r = |r|. The direction is tangent to a circle perpendicular to the wire according to the right hand rule.[20]: 225 

A slightly more general[21][note 9] way of relating the current   to the B-field is through Ampère's law:

 
where the line integral is over any arbitrary loop and   is the current enclosed by that loop. Ampère's law is always valid for steady currents and can be used to calculate the B-field for certain highly symmetric situations such as an infinite wire or an infinite solenoid.

In a modified form that accounts for time varying electric fields, Ampère's law is one of four Maxwell's equations that describe electricity and magnetism.

Force on moving charges and current

Force on a charged particle

A charged particle moving in a B-field experiences a sideways force that is proportional to the strength of the magnetic field, the component of the velocity that is perpendicular to the magnetic field and the charge of the particle. This force is known as the Lorentz force, and is given by

 
where F is the force, q is the electric charge of the particle, v is the instantaneous velocity of the particle, and B is the magnetic field (in teslas).

The Lorentz force is always perpendicular to both the velocity of the particle and the magnetic field that created it. When a charged particle moves in a static magnetic field, it traces a helical path in which the helix axis is parallel to the magnetic field, and in which the speed of the particle remains constant. Because the magnetic force is always perpendicular to the motion, the magnetic field can do no work on an isolated charge.[22][23] It can only do work indirectly, via the electric field generated by a changing magnetic field. It is often claimed that the magnetic force can do work to a non-elementary magnetic dipole, or to charged particles whose motion is constrained by other forces, but this is incorrect[24] because the work in those cases is performed by the electric forces of the charges deflected by the magnetic field.

Force on current-carrying wire

The force on a current carrying wire is similar to that of a moving charge as expected since a current carrying wire is a collection of moving charges. A current-carrying wire feels a force in the presence of a magnetic field. The Lorentz force on a macroscopic current is often referred to as the Laplace force. Consider a conductor of length , cross section A, and charge q due to electric current i. If this conductor is placed in a magnetic field of magnitude B that makes an angle θ with the velocity of charges in the conductor, the force exerted on a single charge q is

 
so, for N charges where
 
the force exerted on the conductor is
 
where i = nqvA.

Relation between H and B

The formulas derived for the magnetic field above are correct when dealing with the entire current. A magnetic material placed inside a magnetic field, though, generates its own bound current, which can be a challenge to calculate. (This bound current is due to the sum of atomic sized current loops and the spin of the subatomic particles such as electrons that make up the material.) The H-field as defined above helps factor out this bound current; but to see how, it helps to introduce the concept of magnetization first.

Magnetization

The magnetization vector field M represents how strongly a region of material is magnetized. It is defined as the net magnetic dipole moment per unit volume of that region. The magnetization of a uniform magnet is therefore a material constant, equal to the magnetic moment m of the magnet divided by its volume. Since the SI unit of magnetic moment is A⋅m2, the SI unit of magnetization M is ampere per meter, identical to that of the H-field.

The magnetization M field of a region points in the direction of the average magnetic dipole moment in that region. Magnetization field lines, therefore, begin near the magnetic south pole and ends near the magnetic north pole. (Magnetization does not exist outside the magnet.)

In the Amperian loop model, the magnetization is due to combining many tiny Amperian loops to form a resultant current called bound current. This bound current, then, is the source of the magnetic B field due to the magnet. Given the definition of the magnetic dipole, the magnetization field follows a similar law to that of Ampere's law:[25]

 
where the integral is a line integral over any closed loop and Ib is the bound current enclosed by that closed loop.

In the magnetic pole model, magnetization begins at and ends at magnetic poles. If a given region, therefore, has a net positive "magnetic pole strength" (corresponding to a north pole) then it has more magnetization field lines entering it than leaving it. Mathematically this is equivalent to:

 
where the integral is a closed surface integral over the closed surface S and qM is the "magnetic charge" (in units of magnetic flux) enclosed by S. (A closed surface completely surrounds a region with no holes to let any field lines escape.) The negative sign occurs because the magnetization field moves from south to north.

H-field and magnetic materials

 
Comparison of B, H and M inside and outside a cylindrical bar magnet.

In SI units, the H-field is related to the B-field by

 

In terms of the H-field, Ampere's law is

 
where If represents the 'free current' enclosed by the loop so that the line integral of H does not depend at all on the bound currents.[26]

For the differential equivalent of this equation see Maxwell's equations. Ampere's law leads to the boundary condition

 
where Kf is the surface free current density and the unit normal   points in the direction from medium 2 to medium 1.[27]

Similarly, a surface integral of H over any closed surface is independent of the free currents and picks out the "magnetic charges" within that closed surface:

 

which does not depend on the free currents.

The H-field, therefore, can be separated into two[note 10] independent parts:

 

where H0 is the applied magnetic field due only to the free currents and Hd is the demagnetizing field due only to the bound currents.

The magnetic H-field, therefore, re-factors the bound current in terms of "magnetic charges". The H field lines loop only around "free current" and, unlike the magnetic B field, begins and ends near magnetic poles as well.

Magnetism

Most materials respond to an applied B-field by producing their own magnetization M and therefore their own B-fields. Typically, the response is weak and exists only when the magnetic field is applied. The term magnetism describes how materials respond on the microscopic level to an applied magnetic field and is used to categorize the magnetic phase of a material. Materials are divided into groups based upon their magnetic behavior:

In the case of paramagnetism and diamagnetism, the magnetization M is often proportional to the applied magnetic field such that:

 
where μ is a material dependent parameter called the permeability. In some cases the permeability may be a second rank tensor so that H may not point in the same direction as B. These relations between B and H are examples of constitutive equations. However, superconductors and ferromagnets have a more complex B-to-H relation; see magnetic hysteresis.

Stored energy

Energy is needed to generate a magnetic field both to work against the electric field that a changing magnetic field creates and to change the magnetization of any material within the magnetic field. For non-dispersive materials, this same energy is released when the magnetic field is destroyed so that the energy can be modeled as being stored in the magnetic field.

For linear, non-dispersive, materials (such that B = μH where μ is frequency-independent), the energy density is:

 

If there are no magnetic materials around then μ can be replaced by μ0. The above equation cannot be used for nonlinear materials, though; a more general expression given below must be used.

In general, the incremental amount of work per unit volume δW needed to cause a small change of magnetic field δB is:

 

Once the relationship between H and B is known this equation is used to determine the work needed to reach a given magnetic state. For hysteretic materials such as ferromagnets and superconductors, the work needed also depends on how the magnetic field is created. For linear non-dispersive materials, though, the general equation leads directly to the simpler energy density equation given above.

Appearance in Maxwell's equations

Like all vector fields, a magnetic field has two important mathematical properties that relates it to its sources. (For B the sources are currents and changing electric fields.) These two properties, along with the two corresponding properties of the electric field, make up Maxwell's Equations. Maxwell's Equations together with the Lorentz force law form a complete description of classical electrodynamics including both electricity and magnetism.

The first property is the divergence of a vector field A, · A, which represents how A "flows" outward from a given point. As discussed above, a B-field line never starts or ends at a point but instead forms a complete loop. This is mathematically equivalent to saying that the divergence of B is zero. (Such vector fields are called solenoidal vector fields.) This property is called Gauss's law for magnetism and is equivalent to the statement that there are no isolated magnetic poles or magnetic monopoles.

The second mathematical property is called the curl, such that × A represents how A curls or "circulates" around a given point. The result of the curl is called a "circulation source". The equations for the curl of B and of E are called the Ampère–Maxwell equation and Faraday's law respectively.

Gauss' law for magnetism

One important property of the B-field produced this way is that magnetic B-field lines neither start nor end (mathematically, B is a solenoidal vector field); a field line may only extend to infinity, or wrap around to form a closed curve, or follow a never-ending (possibly chaotic) path.[33] Magnetic field lines exit a magnet near its north pole and enter near its south pole, but inside the magnet B-field lines continue through the magnet from the south pole back to the north.[note 11] If a B-field line enters a magnet somewhere it has to leave somewhere else; it is not allowed to have an end point.

More formally, since all the magnetic field lines that enter any given region must also leave that region, subtracting the "number"[note 12] of field lines that enter the region from the number that exit gives identically zero. Mathematically this is equivalent to Gauss's law for magnetism:

 
where the integral is a surface integral over the closed surface S (a closed surface is one that completely surrounds a region with no holes to let any field lines escape). Since dA points outward, the dot product in the integral is positive for B-field pointing out and negative for B-field pointing in.

Faraday's Law

A changing magnetic field, such as a magnet moving through a conducting coil, generates an electric field (and therefore tends to drive a current in such a coil). This is known as Faraday's law and forms the basis of many electrical generators and electric motors. Mathematically, Faraday's law is:

 

where   is the electromotive force (or EMF, the voltage generated around a closed loop) and Φ is the magnetic flux—the product of the area times the magnetic field normal to that area. (This definition of magnetic flux is why B is often referred to as magnetic flux density.)[34]: 210  The negative sign represents the fact that any current generated by a changing magnetic field in a coil produces a magnetic field that opposes the change in the magnetic field that induced it. This phenomenon is known as Lenz's law. This integral formulation of Faraday's law can be converted[note 13] into a differential form, which applies under slightly different conditions.

 

Ampère's Law and Maxwell's correction

Similar to the way that a changing magnetic field generates an electric field, a changing electric field generates a magnetic field. This fact is known as Maxwell's correction to Ampère's law and is applied as an additive term to Ampere's law as given above. This additional term is proportional to the time rate of change of the electric flux and is similar to Faraday's law above but with a different and positive constant out front. (The electric flux through an area is proportional to the area times the perpendicular part of the electric field.)

The full law including the correction term is known as the Maxwell–Ampère equation. It is not commonly given in integral form because the effect is so small that it can typically be ignored in most cases where the integral form is used.

The Maxwell term is critically important in the creation and propagation of electromagnetic waves. Maxwell's correction to Ampère's Law together with Faraday's law of induction describes how mutually changing electric and magnetic fields interact to sustain each other and thus to form electromagnetic waves, such as light: a changing electric field generates a changing magnetic field, which generates a changing electric field again. These, though, are usually described using the differential form of this equation given below.

 

where J is the complete microscopic current density.

As discussed above, materials respond to an applied electric E field and an applied magnetic B field by producing their own internal "bound" charge and current distributions that contribute to E and B but are difficult to calculate. To circumvent this problem, H and D fields are used to re-factor Maxwell's equations in terms of the free current density Jf:

 

These equations are not any more general than the original equations (if the "bound" charges and currents in the material are known). They also must be supplemented by the relationship between B and H as well as that between E and D. On the other hand, for simple relationships between these quantities this form of Maxwell's equations can circumvent the need to calculate the bound charges and currents.

Formulation in special relativity and quantum electrodynamics

Relativistic Electrodynamics

As different aspects of the same phenomenon

According to the special theory of relativity, the partition of the electromagnetic force into separate electric and magnetic components is not fundamental, but varies with the observational frame of reference: An electric force perceived by one observer may be perceived by another (in a different frame of reference) as a magnetic force, or a mixture of electric and magnetic forces.

The magnetic field existing as electric field in other frames can be shown by consistency of equations obtained from Lorentz transformation of four force from Coulomb's Law in particle's rest frame with Maxwell's laws considering definition of fields from Lorentz force and for non accelerating condition. The form of magnetic field hence obtained by Lorentz transformation of four-force from the form of Coulomb's law in source's initial frame is given by:[35]

 
where   is the charge of the point source,   is the position vector from the point source to the point in space,   is the velocity vector of the charged particle,   is the ratio of speed of the charged particle divided by the speed of light and   is the angle between   and  . This form of magnetic field can be shown to satisfy maxwell's laws within the constraint of particle being non accelerating.[36] Note that the above reduces to Biot-Savart law for non relativistic stream of current ( ).

Formally, special relativity combines the electric and magnetic fields into a rank-2 tensor, called the electromagnetic tensor. Changing reference frames mixes these components. This is analogous to the way that special relativity mixes space and time into spacetime, and mass, momentum, and energy into four-momentum.[37] Similarly, the energy stored in a magnetic field is mixed with the energy stored in an electric field in the electromagnetic stress–energy tensor.

Magnetic vector potential

In advanced topics such as quantum mechanics and relativity it is often easier to work with a potential formulation of electrodynamics rather than in terms of the electric and magnetic fields. In this representation, the magnetic vector potential A, and the electric scalar potential φ, are defined using gauge fixing such that:

 
.

The vector potential, A given by this form may be interpreted as a generalized potential momentum per unit charge [38] just as φ is interpreted as a generalized potential energy per unit charge. There are multiple choices one can make for the potential fields that satisfy the above condition. However, the choice of potentials is represented by its respective gauge condition.

Maxwell's equations when expressed in terms of the potentials in Lorentz gauge can be cast into a form that agrees with special relativity.[39] In relativity, A together with φ forms a four-potential regardless of the gauge condition, analogous to the four-momentum that combines the momentum and energy of a particle. Using the four potential instead of the electromagnetic tensor has the advantage of being much simpler—and it can be easily modified to work with quantum mechanics.

Propagation of Electric and Magnetic fields

Special theory of relativity imposes the condition for events related by cause and effect to be time-like separated, that is that causal efficacy propagates no faster than light.[40] Maxwell's equations for electromagnetism are found to be in favor of this as electric and magnetic disturbances are found to travel at the speed of light in space. Electric and magnetic fields from classical electrodynamics obey the principle of locality in physics and are expressed in terms of retarded time or the time at which the cause of a measured field originated given that the influence of field travelled at speed of light. The retarded time for a point particle is given as solution of:

 

where   is retarded time or the time at which the source's contribution of the field originated,   is the position vector of the particle as function of time,   is the point in space,   is the time at which fields are measured and   is the speed of light. The equation subtracts the time taken for light to travel from particle to the point in space from the time of measurement to find time of origin of the fields. The uniqueness of solution for   for given  ,   and   is valid for charged particles moving slower than speed of light.[41]

Magnetic field of arbitrary moving point charge

The solution of maxwell's equations for electric and magnetic field of a point charge is expressed in terms of retarded time or the time at which the particle in the past causes the field at the point, given that the influence travels across space at the speed of light.

Any arbitrary motion of point charge causes electric and magnetic fields found by solving maxwell's equations using green's function for retarded potentials and hence finding the fields to be as follows:

 

 

where  and   are electric scalar potential and magnetic vector potential in Lorentz gauge,   is the charge of the point source,   is a unit vector pointing from charged particle to the point in space,   is the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light and   is the corresponding Lorentz factor. Hence by the principle of superposition, the fields of a system of charges also obey principle of locality.

Quantum electrodynamics

In modern physics, the electromagnetic field is understood to be not a classical field, but rather a quantum field; it is represented not as a vector of three numbers at each point, but as a vector of three quantum operators at each point. The most accurate modern description of the electromagnetic interaction (and much else) is quantum electrodynamics (QED),[42] which is incorporated into a more complete theory known as the Standard Model of particle physics.

In QED, the magnitude of the electromagnetic interactions between charged particles (and their antiparticles) is computed using perturbation theory. These rather complex formulas produce a remarkable pictorial representation as Feynman diagrams in which virtual photons are exchanged.

Predictions of QED agree with experiments to an extremely high degree of accuracy: currently about 10−12 (and limited by experimental errors); for details see precision tests of QED. This makes QED one of the most accurate physical theories constructed thus far.

All equations in this article are in the classical approximation, which is less accurate than the quantum description mentioned here. However, under most everyday circumstances, the difference between the two theories is negligible.

Uses and examples

Earth's magnetic field

 
A sketch of Earth's magnetic field representing the source of the field as a magnet. The south pole of the magnetic field is near the geographic north pole of the Earth.

The Earth's magnetic field is produced by convection of a liquid iron alloy in the outer core. In a dynamo process, the movements drive a feedback process in which electric currents create electric and magnetic fields that in turn act on the currents.[43]

The field at the surface of the Earth is approximately the same as if a giant bar magnet were positioned at the center of the Earth and tilted at an angle of about 11° off the rotational axis of the Earth (see the figure).[44] The north pole of a magnetic compass needle points roughly north, toward the North Magnetic Pole. However, because a magnetic pole is attracted to its opposite, the North Magnetic Pole is actually the south pole of the geomagnetic field. This confusion in terminology arises because the pole of a magnet is defined by the geographical direction it points.[45]

Earth's magnetic field is not constant—the strength of the field and the location of its poles vary.[46] Moreover, the poles periodically reverse their orientation in a process called geomagnetic reversal. The most recent reversal occurred 780,000 years ago.[47]

Rotating magnetic fields

The rotating magnetic field is a key principle in the operation of alternating-current motors. A permanent magnet in such a field rotates so as to maintain its alignment with the external field. This effect was conceptualized by Nikola Tesla, and later utilized in his and others' early AC (alternating current) electric motors.

Magnetic torque is used to drive electric motors. In one simple motor design, a magnet is fixed to a freely rotating shaft and subjected to a magnetic field from an array of electromagnets. By continuously switching the electric current through each of the electromagnets, thereby flipping the polarity of their magnetic fields, like poles are kept next to the rotor; the resultant torque is transferred to the shaft.

A rotating magnetic field can be constructed using two orthogonal coils with 90 degrees phase difference in their AC currents. However, in practice such a system would be supplied through a three-wire arrangement with unequal currents.

This inequality would cause serious problems in standardization of the conductor size and so, to overcome it, three-phase systems are used where the three currents are equal in magnitude and have 120 degrees phase difference. Three similar coils having mutual geometrical angles of 120 degrees create the rotating magnetic field in this case. The ability of the three-phase system to create a rotating field, utilized in electric motors, is one of the main reasons why three-phase systems dominate the world's electrical power supply systems.

Synchronous motors use DC-voltage-fed rotor windings, which lets the excitation of the machine be controlled—and induction motors use short-circuited rotors (instead of a magnet) following the rotating magnetic field of a multicoiled stator. The short-circuited turns of the rotor develop eddy currents in the rotating field of the stator, and these currents in turn move the rotor by the Lorentz force.

In 1882, Nikola Tesla identified the concept of the rotating magnetic field. In 1885, Galileo Ferraris independently researched the concept. In 1888, Tesla gained U.S. Patent 381,968 for his work. Also in 1888, Ferraris published his research in a paper to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Turin.

Hall effect

The charge carriers of a current-carrying conductor placed in a transverse magnetic field experience a sideways Lorentz force; this results in a charge separation in a direction perpendicular to the current and to the magnetic field. The resultant voltage in that direction is proportional to the applied magnetic field. This is known as the Hall effect.

The Hall effect is often used to measure the magnitude of a magnetic field. It is used as well to find the sign of the dominant charge carriers in materials such as semiconductors (negative electrons or positive holes).

Magnetic circuits

An important use of H is in magnetic circuits where B = μH inside a linear material. Here, μ is the magnetic permeability of the material. This result is similar in form to Ohm's law J = σE, where J is the current density, σ is the conductance and E is the electric field. Extending this analogy, the counterpart to the macroscopic Ohm's law (I = VR) is:

 

where   is the magnetic flux in the circuit,   is the magnetomotive force applied to the circuit, and Rm is the reluctance of the circuit. Here the reluctance Rm is a quantity similar in nature to resistance for the flux. Using this analogy it is straightforward to calculate the magnetic flux of complicated magnetic field geometries, by using all the available techniques of circuit theory.

Largest magnetic fields

As of October 2018, the largest magnetic field produced over a macroscopic volume outside a lab setting is 2.8 kT (VNIIEF in Sarov, Russia, 1998).[48][49] As of October 2018, the largest magnetic field produced in a laboratory over a macroscopic volume was 1.2 kT by researchers at the University of Tokyo in 2018.[49] The largest magnetic fields produced in a laboratory occur in particle accelerators, such as RHIC, inside the collisions of heavy ions, where microscopic fields reach 1014 T.[50][51] Magnetars have the strongest known magnetic fields of any naturally occurring object, ranging from 0.1 to 100 GT (108 to 1011 T).[52]

History

 
One of the first drawings of a magnetic field, by René Descartes, 1644, showing the Earth attracting lodestones. It illustrated his theory that magnetism was caused by the circulation of tiny helical particles, "threaded parts", through threaded pores in magnets.

Early developments

While magnets and some properties of magnetism were known to ancient societies, the research of magnetic fields began in 1269 when French scholar Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt mapped out the magnetic field on the surface of a spherical magnet using iron needles. Noting the resulting field lines crossed at two points he named those points "poles" in analogy to Earth's poles. He also articulated the principle that magnets always have both a north and south pole, no matter how finely one slices them.[53][note 14]

Almost three centuries later, William Gilbert of Colchester replicated Petrus Peregrinus's work and was the first to state explicitly that Earth is a magnet.[54]: 34  Published in 1600, Gilbert's work, De Magnete, helped to establish magnetism as a science.

Mathematical development

 
Hans Christian Ørsted, Der Geist in der Natur, 1854

In 1750, John Michell stated that magnetic poles attract and repel in accordance with an inverse square law[54]: 56  Charles-Augustin de Coulomb experimentally verified this in 1785 and stated explicitly that north and south poles cannot be separated.[54]: 59  Building on this force between poles, Siméon Denis Poisson (1781–1840) created the first successful model of the magnetic field, which he presented in 1824.[54]: 64  In this model, a magnetic H-field is produced by magnetic poles and magnetism is due to small pairs of north–south magnetic poles.

Three discoveries in 1820 challenged this foundation of magnetism. Hans Christian Ørsted demonstrated that a current-carrying wire is surrounded by a circular magnetic field.[note 15][55] Then André-Marie Ampère showed that parallel wires with currents attract one another if the currents are in the same direction and repel if they are in opposite directions.[54]: 87 [56] Finally, Jean-Baptiste Biot and Félix Savart announced empirical results about the forces that a current-carrying long, straight wire exerted on a small magnet, determining the forces were inversely proportional to the perpendicular distance from the wire to the magnet.[57][54]: 86  Laplace later deduced a law of force based on the differential action of a differential section of the wire,[57][58] which became known as the Biot–Savart law, as Laplace did not publish his findings.[59]

Extending these experiments, Ampère published his own successful model of magnetism in 1825. In it, he showed the equivalence of electrical currents to magnets[54]: 88  and proposed that magnetism is due to perpetually flowing loops of current instead of the dipoles of magnetic charge in Poisson's model.[note 16] Further, Ampère derived both Ampère's force law describing the force between two currents and Ampère's law, which, like the Biot–Savart law, correctly described the magnetic field generated by a steady current. Also in this work, Ampère introduced the term electrodynamics to describe the relationship between electricity and magnetism.[54]: 88–92 

In 1831, Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction when he found that a changing magnetic field generates an encircling electric field, formulating what is now known as Faraday's law of induction.[54]: 189–192  Later, Franz Ernst Neumann proved that, for a moving conductor in a magnetic field, induction is a consequence of Ampère's force law.[54]: 222  In the process, he introduced the magnetic vector potential, which was later shown to be equivalent to the underlying mechanism proposed by Faraday.[54]: 225 

In 1850, Lord Kelvin, then known as William Thomson, distinguished between two magnetic fields now denoted H and B. The former applied to Poisson's model and the latter to Ampère's model and induction.[54]: 224  Further, he derived how H and B relate to each other and coined the term permeability.[54]: 245 [60]

Between 1861 and 1865, James Clerk Maxwell developed and published Maxwell's equations, which explained and united all of classical electricity and magnetism. The first set of these equations was published in a paper entitled On Physical Lines of Force in 1861. These equations were valid but incomplete. Maxwell completed his set of equations in his later 1865 paper A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field and demonstrated the fact that light is an electromagnetic wave. Heinrich Hertz published papers in 1887 and 1888 experimentally confirming this fact.[61][62]

Modern developments

In 1887, Tesla developed an induction motor that ran on alternating current. The motor used polyphase current, which generated a rotating magnetic field to turn the motor (a principle that Tesla claimed to have conceived in 1882).[63][64][65] Tesla received a patent for his electric motor in May 1888.[66][67] In 1885, Galileo Ferraris independently researched rotating magnetic fields and subsequently published his research in a paper to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Turin, just two months before Tesla was awarded his patent, in March 1888.[68]

The twentieth century showed that classical electrodynamics is already consistent with special relativity, and extended classical electrodynamics to work with quantum mechanics. Albert Einstein, in his paper of 1905 that established relativity, showed that both the electric and magnetic fields are part of the same phenomena viewed from different reference frames. Finally, the emergent field of quantum mechanics was merged with electrodynamics to form quantum electrodynamics, which first formalized the notion that electromagnetic field energy is quantized in the form of photons.

See also

General

Mathematics

Applications

  • Dynamo theory – a proposed mechanism for the creation of the Earth's magnetic field
  • Helmholtz coil – a device for producing a region of nearly uniform magnetic field
  • Magnetic field viewing film – Film used to view the magnetic field of an area
  • Magnetic pistol – a device on torpedoes or naval mines that detect the magnetic field of their target
  • Maxwell coil – a device for producing a large volume of an almost constant magnetic field
  • Stellar magnetic field – a discussion of the magnetic field of stars
  • Teltron tube – device used to display an electron beam and demonstrates effect of electric and magnetic fields on moving charges

Notes

  1. ^ The letters B and H were originally chosen by Maxwell in his Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism (Vol. II, pp. 236–237). For many quantities, he simply started choosing letters from the beginning of the alphabet. See Ralph Baierlein (2000). "Answer to Question #73. S is for entropy, Q is for charge". American Journal of Physics. 68 (8): 691. Bibcode:2000AmJPh..68..691B. doi:10.1119/1.19524.
  2. ^ Edward Purcell, in Electricity and Magnetism, McGraw-Hill, 1963, writes, Even some modern writers who treat B as the primary field feel obliged to call it the magnetic induction because the name magnetic field was historically preempted by H. This seems clumsy and pedantic. If you go into the laboratory and ask a physicist what causes the pion trajectories in his bubble chamber to curve, he'll probably answer "magnetic field", not "magnetic induction." You will seldom hear a geophysicist refer to the Earth's magnetic induction, or an astrophysicist talk about the magnetic induction of the galaxy. We propose to keep on calling B the magnetic field. As for H, although other names have been invented for it, we shall call it "the field H" or even "the magnetic field H." In a similar vein, M Gerloch (1983). Magnetism and Ligand-field Analysis. Cambridge University Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-521-24939-3. says: "So we may think of both B and H as magnetic fields, but drop the word 'magnetic' from H so as to maintain the distinction ... As Purcell points out, 'it is only the names that give trouble, not the symbols'."
  3. ^ An alternative mnemonic to the right hand rule is Fleming's left-hand rule.
  4. ^ The SI unit of ΦB (magnetic flux) is the weber (symbol: Wb), related to the tesla by 1 Wb/m2 = 1 T. The SI unit tesla is equal to (newton·second)/(coulomb·metre). This can be seen from the magnetic part of the Lorentz force law.
  5. ^ The use of iron filings to display a field presents something of an exception to this picture; the filings alter the magnetic field so that it is much larger along the "lines" of iron, because of the large permeability of iron relative to air.
  6. ^ Here, "small" means that the observer is sufficiently far away from the magnet, so that the magnet can be considered as infinitesimally small. "Larger" magnets need to include more complicated terms in the expression[clarification needed (referent of expression)] and depend on the entire geometry of the magnet not just m.
  7. ^ Either B or H may be used for the magnetic field outside the magnet.
  8. ^ In practice, the Biot–Savart law and other laws of magnetostatics are often used even when a current change in time, as long as it does not change too quickly. It is often used, for instance, for standard household currents, which oscillate sixty times per second.[20]: 223 
  9. ^ The Biot–Savart law contains the additional restriction (boundary condition) that the B-field must go to zero fast enough at infinity. It also depends on the divergence of B being zero, which is always valid. (There are no magnetic charges.)
  10. ^ A third term is needed for changing electric fields and polarization currents; this displacement current term is covered in Maxwell's equations below.
  11. ^ To see that this must be true imagine placing a compass inside a magnet. There, the north pole of the compass points toward the north pole of the magnet since magnets stacked on each other point in the same direction.
  12. ^ As discussed above, magnetic field lines are primarily a conceptual tool used to represent the mathematics behind magnetic fields. The total "number" of field lines is dependent on how the field lines are drawn. In practice, integral equations such as the one that follows in the main text are used instead.
  13. ^ A complete expression for Faraday's law of induction in terms of the electric E and magnetic fields can be written as:
     
    where ∂Σ(t) is the moving closed path bounding the moving surface Σ(t), and dA is an element of surface area of Σ(t). The first integral calculates the work done moving a charge a distance d based upon the Lorentz force law. In the case where the bounding surface is stationary, the Kelvin–Stokes theorem can be used to show this equation is equivalent to the Maxwell–Faraday equation.
  14. ^ His Epistola Petri Peregrini de Maricourt ad Sygerum de Foucaucourt Militem de Magnete, which is often shortened to Epistola de magnete, is dated 1269 C.E.
  15. ^ During a lecture demonstration on the effects of a current on a campus needle, Ørsted showed that when a current-carrying wire is placed at a right angle with the compass, nothing happens. When he tried to orient the wire parallel to the compass needle, however, it produced a pronounced deflection of the compass needle. By placing the compass on different sides of the wire, he was able to determine the field forms perfect circles around the wire.[54]: 85 
  16. ^ From the outside, the field of a dipole of magnetic charge has exactly the same form as a current loop when both are sufficiently small. Therefore, the two models differ only for magnetism inside magnetic material.

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Further reading

  • Jiles, David (1994). Introduction to Electronic Properties of Materials (1st ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-0-412-49580-9.
  • Tipler, Paul (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Electricity, Magnetism, Light, and Elementary Modern Physics (5th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 978-0-7167-0810-0. OCLC 51095685.

External links

  •   Media related to Magnetic fields at Wikimedia Commons
  • Crowell, B., "Electromagnetism".
  • Nave, R., "Magnetic Field". HyperPhysics.
  • "Magnetism", (archived 9 July 2006). theory.uwinnipeg.ca.
  • Hoadley, Rick, "What do magnetic fields look like?" 17 July 2005.

magnetic, field, other, uses, disambiguation, magnetic, field, vector, field, that, describes, magnetic, influence, moving, electric, charges, electric, currents, magnetic, materials, moving, charge, magnetic, field, experiences, force, perpendicular, velocity. For other uses see Magnetic field disambiguation A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges electric currents 1 ch1 2 and magnetic materials A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to the magnetic field 1 ch13 3 278 A permanent magnet s magnetic field pulls on ferromagnetic materials such as iron and attracts or repels other magnets In addition a nonuniform magnetic field exerts minuscule forces on nonmagnetic materials by three other magnetic effects paramagnetism diamagnetism and antiferromagnetism although these forces are usually so small they can only be detected by laboratory equipment Magnetic fields surround magnetized materials and are created by electric currents such as those used in electromagnets and by electric fields varying in time Since both strength and direction of a magnetic field may vary with location it is described mathematically by a function assigning a vector to each point of space called a vector field The shape of the magnetic field produced by a horseshoe magnet is revealed by the orientation of iron filings sprinkled on a piece of paper above the magnet In electromagnetics the term magnetic field is used for two distinct but closely related vector fields denoted by the symbols B and H In the International System of Units the unit of H magnetic field strength is the ampere per meter A m 4 22 The unit of B the magnetic flux density is the tesla in SI base units kilogram per second2 per ampere 4 21 which is equivalent to newton per meter per ampere H and B differ in how they account for magnetization In vacuum the two fields are related through the vacuum permeability B m 0 H displaystyle mathbf B mu 0 mathbf H but in a magnetized material the quantities on each side of this equation differ by the magnetization field of the material Magnetic fields are produced by moving electric charges and the intrinsic magnetic moments of elementary particles associated with a fundamental quantum property their spin 5 1 ch1 Magnetic fields and electric fields are interrelated and are both components of the electromagnetic force one of the four fundamental forces of nature Magnetic fields are used throughout modern technology particularly in electrical engineering and electromechanics Rotating magnetic fields are used in both electric motors and generators The interaction of magnetic fields in electric devices such as transformers is conceptualized and investigated as magnetic circuits Magnetic forces give information about the charge carriers in a material through the Hall effect The Earth produces its own magnetic field which shields the Earth s ozone layer from the solar wind and is important in navigation using a compass Contents 1 Description 1 1 The B field 1 2 The H field 1 3 Measurement 1 4 Visualization 2 Magnetic field of permanent magnets 2 1 Magnetic pole model 2 2 Amperian loop model 3 Interactions with magnets 3 1 Force between magnets 3 2 Magnetic torque on permanent magnets 4 Interactions with electric currents 4 1 Magnetic field due to moving charges and electric currents 4 2 Force on moving charges and current 4 2 1 Force on a charged particle 4 2 2 Force on current carrying wire 5 Relation between H and B 5 1 Magnetization 5 2 H field and magnetic materials 5 3 Magnetism 6 Stored energy 7 Appearance in Maxwell s equations 7 1 Gauss law for magnetism 7 2 Faraday s Law 7 3 Ampere s Law and Maxwell s correction 8 Formulation in special relativity and quantum electrodynamics 8 1 Relativistic Electrodynamics 8 1 1 As different aspects of the same phenomenon 8 1 2 Magnetic vector potential 8 1 3 Propagation of Electric and Magnetic fields 8 1 4 Magnetic field of arbitrary moving point charge 8 2 Quantum electrodynamics 9 Uses and examples 9 1 Earth s magnetic field 9 2 Rotating magnetic fields 9 3 Hall effect 9 4 Magnetic circuits 9 5 Largest magnetic fields 10 History 10 1 Early developments 10 2 Mathematical development 10 3 Modern developments 11 See also 11 1 General 11 2 Mathematics 11 3 Applications 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksDescriptionThe force on an electric charge depends on its location speed and direction two vector fields are used to describe this force 1 ch1 The first is the electric field which describes the force acting on a stationary charge and gives the component of the force that is independent of motion The magnetic field in contrast describes the component of the force that is proportional to both the speed and direction of charged particles 1 ch13 The field is defined by the Lorentz force law and is at each instant perpendicular to both the motion of the charge and the force it experiences There are two different but closely related vector fields which are both sometimes called the magnetic field written B and H note 1 While both the best names for these fields and exact interpretation of what these fields represent has been the subject of long running debate there is wide agreement about how the underlying physics work 6 Historically the term magnetic field was reserved for H while using other terms for B but many recent textbooks use the term magnetic field to describe B as well as or in place of H note 2 There are many alternative names for both see sidebar The B field Finding the magnetic force A charged particle that is moving with velocity v in a magnetic field B will feel a magnetic force F Since the magnetic force always pulls sideways to the direction of motion the particle moves in a circle Since these three vectors are related to each other by a cross product the direction of this force can be found using the right hand rule Alternative names for B 7 Magnetic flux density 4 138 Magnetic induction 8 Magnetic field ambiguous The magnetic field vector B at any point can be defined as the vector that when used in the Lorentz force law correctly predicts the force on a charged particle at that point 9 10 204 Lorentz force law vector form SI units F q E q v B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E q mathbf v times mathbf B Here F is the force on the particle q is the particle s electric charge v is the particle s velocity and denotes the cross product The direction of force on the charge can be determined by a mnemonic known as the right hand rule see the figure note 3 Using the right hand pointing the thumb in the direction of the current and the fingers in the direction of the magnetic field the resulting force on the charge points outwards from the palm The force on a negatively charged particle is in the opposite direction If both the speed and the charge are reversed then the direction of the force remains the same For that reason a magnetic field measurement by itself cannot distinguish whether there is a positive charge moving to the right or a negative charge moving to the left Both of these cases produce the same current On the other hand a magnetic field combined with an electric field can distinguish between these see Hall effect below The first term in the Lorentz equation is from the theory of electrostatics and says that a particle of charge q in an electric field E experiences an electric force F electric q E displaystyle mathbf F text electric q mathbf E The second term is the magnetic force 10 F magnetic q v B displaystyle mathbf F text magnetic q mathbf v times mathbf B Using the definition of the cross product the magnetic force can also be written as a scalar equation 9 357 F magnetic q v B sin 8 displaystyle F text magnetic qvB sin theta where Fmagnetic v and B are the scalar magnitude of their respective vectors and 8 is the angle between the velocity of the particle and the magnetic field The vector B is defined as the vector field necessary to make the Lorentz force law correctly describe the motion of a charged particle In other words 9 173 4 T he command Measure the direction and magnitude of the vector B at such and such a place calls for the following operations Take a particle of known charge q Measure the force on q at rest to determine E Then measure the force on the particle when its velocity is v repeat with v in some other direction Now find a B that makes the Lorentz force law fit all these results that is the magnetic field at the place in question The B field can also be defined by the torque on a magnetic dipole m 11 174 Magnetic torque vector form SI units t m B displaystyle boldsymbol tau mathbf m times mathbf B The SI unit of B is tesla symbol T note 4 The Gaussian cgs unit of B is the gauss symbol G The conversion is 1 T 10000 G 12 13 One nanotesla corresponds to 1 gamma symbol g 13 The H field Alternative names for H 7 Magnetic field intensity 8 Magnetic field strength 4 139 Magnetic field Magnetizing fieldThe magnetic H field is defined 10 269 11 192 1 ch36 Definition of the H field vector form SI units H 1 m 0 B M displaystyle mathbf H equiv frac 1 mu 0 mathbf B mathbf M Where m 0 displaystyle mu 0 is the vacuum permeability and M is the magnetization vector In a vacuum B and H are proportional to each other Inside a material they are different see H and B inside and outside magnetic materials The SI unit of the H field is the ampere per metre A m 14 and the CGS unit is the oersted Oe 12 9 286 Measurement Main article Magnetometer An instrument used to measure the local magnetic field is known as a magnetometer Important classes of magnetometers include using induction magnetometers or search coil magnetometers which measure only varying magnetic fields rotating coil magnetometers Hall effect magnetometers NMR magnetometers SQUID magnetometers and fluxgate magnetometers The magnetic fields of distant astronomical objects are measured through their effects on local charged particles For instance electrons spiraling around a field line produce synchrotron radiation that is detectable in radio waves The finest precision for a magnetic field measurement was attained by Gravity Probe B at 5 aT 5 10 18 T 15 Visualization Main article Field line Visualizing magnetic fields Left the direction of magnetic field lines represented by iron filings sprinkled on paper placed above a bar magnet Right compass needles point in the direction of the local magnetic field towards a magnet s south pole and away from its north pole The field can be visualized by a set of magnetic field lines that follow the direction of the field at each point The lines can be constructed by measuring the strength and direction of the magnetic field at a large number of points or at every point in space Then mark each location with an arrow called a vector pointing in the direction of the local magnetic field with its magnitude proportional to the strength of the magnetic field Connecting these arrows then forms a set of magnetic field lines The direction of the magnetic field at any point is parallel to the direction of nearby field lines and the local density of field lines can be made proportional to its strength Magnetic field lines are like streamlines in fluid flow in that they represent a continuous distribution and a different resolution would show more or fewer lines An advantage of using magnetic field lines as a representation is that many laws of magnetism and electromagnetism can be stated completely and concisely using simple concepts such as the number of field lines through a surface These concepts can be quickly translated to their mathematical form For example the number of field lines through a given surface is the surface integral of the magnetic field 9 237 Various phenomena display magnetic field lines as though the field lines were physical phenomena For example iron filings placed in a magnetic field form lines that correspond to field lines note 5 Magnetic field lines are also visually displayed in polar auroras in which plasma particle dipole interactions create visible streaks of light that line up with the local direction of Earth s magnetic field Field lines can be used as a qualitative tool to visualize magnetic forces In ferromagnetic substances like iron and in plasmas magnetic forces can be understood by imagining that the field lines exert a tension like a rubber band along their length and a pressure perpendicular to their length on neighboring field lines Unlike poles of magnets attract because they are linked by many field lines like poles repel because their field lines do not meet but run parallel pushing on each other Magnetic field of permanent magnetsMain article Magnetic moment Models Permanent magnets are objects that produce their own persistent magnetic fields They are made of ferromagnetic materials such as iron and nickel that have been magnetized and they have both a north and a south pole The magnetic field of permanent magnets can be quite complicated especially near the magnet The magnetic field of a small note 6 straight magnet is proportional to the magnet s strength called its magnetic dipole moment m The equations are non trivial and also depend on the distance from the magnet and the orientation of the magnet For simple magnets m points in the direction of a line drawn from the south to the north pole of the magnet Flipping a bar magnet is equivalent to rotating its m by 180 degrees The magnetic field of larger magnets can be obtained by modeling them as a collection of a large number of small magnets called dipoles each having their own m The magnetic field produced by the magnet then is the net magnetic field of these dipoles any net force on the magnet is a result of adding up the forces on the individual dipoles There were two simplified models for the nature of these dipoles These two models produce two different magnetic fields H and B Outside a material though the two are identical to a multiplicative constant so that in many cases the distinction can be ignored This is particularly true for magnetic fields such as those due to electric currents that are not generated by magnetic materials A realistic model of magnetism is more complicated than either of these models neither model fully explains why materials are magnetic The monopole model has no experimental support Ampere s model explains some but not all of a material s magnetic moment Like Ampere s model predicts the motion of electrons within an atom are connected to those electrons orbital magnetic dipole moment and these orbital moments do contribute to the magnetism seen at the macroscopic level However the motion of electrons is not classical and the spin magnetic moment of electrons which is not explained by either model is also a significant contribution to the total moment of magnets Magnetic pole model See also Magnetic monopole The magnetic pole model two opposing poles North and South separated by a distance d produce a H field lines Historically early physics textbooks would model the force and torques between two magnets as due to magnetic poles repelling or attracting each other in the same manner as the Coulomb force between electric charges At the microscopic level this model contradicts the experimental evidence and the pole model of magnetism is no longer the typical way to introduce the concept 10 204 However it is still sometimes used as a macroscopic model for ferromagnetism due to its mathematical simplicity 16 In this model a magnetic H field is produced by fictitious magnetic charges that are spread over the surface of each pole These magnetic charges are in fact related to the magnetization field M The H field therefore is analogous to the electric field E which starts at a positive electric charge and ends at a negative electric charge Near the north pole therefore all H field lines point away from the north pole whether inside the magnet or out while near the south pole all H field lines point toward the south pole whether inside the magnet or out Too a north pole feels a force in the direction of the H field while the force on the south pole is opposite to the H field In the magnetic pole model the elementary magnetic dipole m is formed by two opposite magnetic poles of pole strength qm separated by a small distance vector d such that m qm d The magnetic pole model predicts correctly the field H both inside and outside magnetic materials in particular the fact that H is opposite to the magnetization field M inside a permanent magnet Since it is based on the fictitious idea of a magnetic charge density the pole model has limitations Magnetic poles cannot exist apart from each other as electric charges can but always come in north south pairs If a magnetized object is divided in half a new pole appears on the surface of each piece so each has a pair of complementary poles The magnetic pole model does not account for magnetism that is produced by electric currents nor the inherent connection between angular momentum and magnetism The pole model usually treats magnetic charge as a mathematical abstraction rather than a physical property of particles However a magnetic monopole is a hypothetical particle or class of particles that physically has only one magnetic pole either a north pole or a south pole In other words it would possess a magnetic charge analogous to an electric charge Magnetic field lines would start or end on magnetic monopoles so if they exist they would give exceptions to the rule that magnetic field lines neither start nor end Some theories such as Grand Unified Theories have predicted the existence of magnetic monopoles but so far none have been observed Amperian loop model Main article Magnetic dipole See also Spin magnetic moment and Micromagnetism The Amperian loop model A current loop ring that goes into the page at the x and comes out at the dot produces a B field lines As the radius of the current loop shrinks the fields produced become identical to an abstract magnetostatic dipole represented by an arrow pointing to the right In the model developed by Ampere the elementary magnetic dipole that makes up all magnets is a sufficiently small Amperian loop with current I and loop area A The dipole moment of this loop is m IA These magnetic dipoles produce a magnetic B field The magnetic field of a magnetic dipole is depicted in the figure From outside the ideal magnetic dipole is identical to that of an ideal electric dipole of the same strength Unlike the electric dipole a magnetic dipole is properly modeled as a current loop having a current I and an area a Such a current loop has a magnetic moment ofm I a displaystyle m Ia where the direction of m is perpendicular to the area of the loop and depends on the direction of the current using the right hand rule An ideal magnetic dipole is modeled as a real magnetic dipole whose area a has been reduced to zero and its current I increased to infinity such that the product m Ia is finite This model clarifies the connection between angular momentum and magnetic moment which is the basis of the Einstein de Haas effect rotation by magnetization and its inverse the Barnett effect or magnetization by rotation 17 Rotating the loop faster in the same direction increases the current and therefore the magnetic moment for example Interactions with magnetsForce between magnets Main article Force between magnets Specifying the force between two small magnets is quite complicated because it depends on the strength and orientation of both magnets and their distance and direction relative to each other The force is particularly sensitive to rotations of the magnets due to magnetic torque The force on each magnet depends on its magnetic moment and the magnetic field note 7 of the other To understand the force between magnets it is useful to examine the magnetic pole model given above In this model the H field of one magnet pushes and pulls on both poles of a second magnet If this H field is the same at both poles of the second magnet then there is no net force on that magnet since the force is opposite for opposite poles If however the magnetic field of the first magnet is nonuniform such as the H near one of its poles each pole of the second magnet sees a different field and is subject to a different force This difference in the two forces moves the magnet in the direction of increasing magnetic field and may also cause a net torque This is a specific example of a general rule that magnets are attracted or repulsed depending on the orientation of the magnet into regions of higher magnetic field Any non uniform magnetic field whether caused by permanent magnets or electric currents exerts a force on a small magnet in this way The details of the Amperian loop model are different and more complicated but yield the same result that magnetic dipoles are attracted repelled into regions of higher magnetic field Mathematically the force on a small magnet having a magnetic moment m due to a magnetic field B is 18 Eq 11 42 F m B displaystyle mathbf F boldsymbol nabla left mathbf m cdot mathbf B right where the gradient is the change of the quantity m B per unit distance and the direction is that of maximum increase of m B The dot product m B mBcos 8 where m and B represent the magnitude of the m and B vectors and 8 is the angle between them If m is in the same direction as B then the dot product is positive and the gradient points uphill pulling the magnet into regions of higher B field more strictly larger m B This equation is strictly only valid for magnets of zero size but is often a good approximation for not too large magnets The magnetic force on larger magnets is determined by dividing them into smaller regions each having their own m then summing up the forces on each of these very small regions Magnetic torque on permanent magnets Main article Magnetic torque If two like poles of two separate magnets are brought near each other and one of the magnets is allowed to turn it promptly rotates to align itself with the first In this example the magnetic field of the stationary magnet creates a magnetic torque on the magnet that is free to rotate This magnetic torque t tends to align a magnet s poles with the magnetic field lines A compass therefore turns to align itself with Earth s magnetic field Torque on a dipole In the pole model of a dipole an H field to right causes equal but opposite forces on a N pole q and a S pole q creating a torque Equivalently a B field induces the same torque on a current loop with the same magnetic dipole moment In terms of the pole model two equal and opposite magnetic charges experiencing the same H also experience equal and opposite forces Since these equal and opposite forces are in different locations this produces a torque proportional to the distance perpendicular to the force between them With the definition of m as the pole strength times the distance between the poles this leads to t m0 m H sin 8 where m0 is a constant called the vacuum permeability measuring 4p 10 7 V s A m and 8 is the angle between H and m Mathematically the torque t on a small magnet is proportional both to the applied magnetic field and to the magnetic moment m of the magnet t m B m 0 m H displaystyle boldsymbol tau mathbf m times mathbf B mu 0 mathbf m times mathbf H where represents the vector cross product This equation includes all of the qualitative information included above There is no torque on a magnet if m is in the same direction as the magnetic field since the cross product is zero for two vectors that are in the same direction Further all other orientations feel a torque that twists them toward the direction of magnetic field Interactions with electric currentsCurrents of electric charges both generate a magnetic field and feel a force due to magnetic B fields Magnetic field due to moving charges and electric currents Main articles Electromagnet Biot Savart law and Ampere s law Right hand grip rule a current flowing in the direction of the white arrow produces a magnetic field shown by the red arrows All moving charged particles produce magnetic fields Moving point charges such as electrons produce complicated but well known magnetic fields that depend on the charge velocity and acceleration of the particles 19 Magnetic field lines form in concentric circles around a cylindrical current carrying conductor such as a length of wire The direction of such a magnetic field can be determined by using the right hand grip rule see figure at right The strength of the magnetic field decreases with distance from the wire For an infinite length wire the strength is inversely proportional to the distance A Solenoid with electric current running through it behaves like a magnet Bending a current carrying wire into a loop concentrates the magnetic field inside the loop while weakening it outside Bending a wire into multiple closely spaced loops to form a coil or solenoid enhances this effect A device so formed around an iron core may act as an electromagnet generating a strong well controlled magnetic field An infinitely long cylindrical electromagnet has a uniform magnetic field inside and no magnetic field outside A finite length electromagnet produces a magnetic field that looks similar to that produced by a uniform permanent magnet with its strength and polarity determined by the current flowing through the coil The magnetic field generated by a steady current I a constant flow of electric charges in which charge neither accumulates nor is depleted at any point note 8 is described by the Biot Savart law 20 224 B m 0 I 4 p w i r e d ℓ r r 2 displaystyle mathbf B frac mu 0 I 4 pi int mathrm wire frac mathrm d boldsymbol ell times mathbf hat r r 2 where the integral sums over the wire length where vector dℓ is the vector line element with direction in the same sense as the current I m0 is the magnetic constant r is the distance between the location of dℓ and the location where the magnetic field is calculated and r is a unit vector in the direction of r For example in the case of a sufficiently long straight wire this becomes B m 0 2 p r I displaystyle mathbf B frac mu 0 2 pi r I where r r The direction is tangent to a circle perpendicular to the wire according to the right hand rule 20 225 A slightly more general 21 note 9 way of relating the current I displaystyle I to the B field is through Ampere s law B d ℓ m 0 I e n c displaystyle oint mathbf B cdot mathrm d boldsymbol ell mu 0 I mathrm enc where the line integral is over any arbitrary loop and I enc displaystyle I text enc is the current enclosed by that loop Ampere s law is always valid for steady currents and can be used to calculate the B field for certain highly symmetric situations such as an infinite wire or an infinite solenoid In a modified form that accounts for time varying electric fields Ampere s law is one of four Maxwell s equations that describe electricity and magnetism Force on moving charges and current Force on a charged particle Main article Lorentz force A charged particle moving in a B field experiences a sideways force that is proportional to the strength of the magnetic field the component of the velocity that is perpendicular to the magnetic field and the charge of the particle This force is known as the Lorentz force and is given byF q E q v B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E q mathbf v times mathbf B where F is the force q is the electric charge of the particle v is the instantaneous velocity of the particle and B is the magnetic field in teslas The Lorentz force is always perpendicular to both the velocity of the particle and the magnetic field that created it When a charged particle moves in a static magnetic field it traces a helical path in which the helix axis is parallel to the magnetic field and in which the speed of the particle remains constant Because the magnetic force is always perpendicular to the motion the magnetic field can do no work on an isolated charge 22 23 It can only do work indirectly via the electric field generated by a changing magnetic field It is often claimed that the magnetic force can do work to a non elementary magnetic dipole or to charged particles whose motion is constrained by other forces but this is incorrect 24 because the work in those cases is performed by the electric forces of the charges deflected by the magnetic field Force on current carrying wire Main article Laplace force The force on a current carrying wire is similar to that of a moving charge as expected since a current carrying wire is a collection of moving charges A current carrying wire feels a force in the presence of a magnetic field The Lorentz force on a macroscopic current is often referred to as the Laplace force Consider a conductor of length ℓ cross section A and charge q due to electric current i If this conductor is placed in a magnetic field of magnitude B that makes an angle 8 with the velocity of charges in the conductor the force exerted on a single charge q isF q v B sin 8 displaystyle F qvB sin theta so for N charges where N n ℓ A displaystyle N n ell A the force exerted on the conductor is f F N q v B n ℓ A sin 8 B i ℓ sin 8 displaystyle f FN qvBn ell A sin theta Bi ell sin theta where i nqvA Relation between H and BThe formulas derived for the magnetic field above are correct when dealing with the entire current A magnetic material placed inside a magnetic field though generates its own bound current which can be a challenge to calculate This bound current is due to the sum of atomic sized current loops and the spin of the subatomic particles such as electrons that make up the material The H field as defined above helps factor out this bound current but to see how it helps to introduce the concept of magnetization first Magnetization Main article Magnetization The magnetization vector field M represents how strongly a region of material is magnetized It is defined as the net magnetic dipole moment per unit volume of that region The magnetization of a uniform magnet is therefore a material constant equal to the magnetic moment m of the magnet divided by its volume Since the SI unit of magnetic moment is A m2 the SI unit of magnetization M is ampere per meter identical to that of the H field The magnetization M field of a region points in the direction of the average magnetic dipole moment in that region Magnetization field lines therefore begin near the magnetic south pole and ends near the magnetic north pole Magnetization does not exist outside the magnet In the Amperian loop model the magnetization is due to combining many tiny Amperian loops to form a resultant current called bound current This bound current then is the source of the magnetic B field due to the magnet Given the definition of the magnetic dipole the magnetization field follows a similar law to that of Ampere s law 25 M d ℓ I b displaystyle oint mathbf M cdot mathrm d boldsymbol ell I mathrm b where the integral is a line integral over any closed loop and Ib is the bound current enclosed by that closed loop In the magnetic pole model magnetization begins at and ends at magnetic poles If a given region therefore has a net positive magnetic pole strength corresponding to a north pole then it has more magnetization field lines entering it than leaving it Mathematically this is equivalent to S m 0 M d A q M displaystyle oint S mu 0 mathbf M cdot mathrm d mathbf A q mathrm M where the integral is a closed surface integral over the closed surface S and qM is the magnetic charge in units of magnetic flux enclosed by S A closed surface completely surrounds a region with no holes to let any field lines escape The negative sign occurs because the magnetization field moves from south to north H field and magnetic materials Comparison of B H and M inside and outside a cylindrical bar magnet See also Demagnetizing field In SI units the H field is related to the B field byH B m 0 M displaystyle mathbf H equiv frac mathbf B mu 0 mathbf M In terms of the H field Ampere s law is H d ℓ B m 0 M d ℓ I t o t I b I f displaystyle oint mathbf H cdot mathrm d boldsymbol ell oint left frac mathbf B mu 0 mathbf M right cdot mathrm d boldsymbol ell I mathrm tot I mathrm b I mathrm f where If represents the free current enclosed by the loop so that the line integral of H does not depend at all on the bound currents 26 For the differential equivalent of this equation see Maxwell s equations Ampere s law leads to the boundary condition H 1 H 2 K f n displaystyle left mathbf H 1 parallel mathbf H 2 parallel right mathbf K mathrm f times hat mathbf n where Kf is the surface free current density and the unit normal n displaystyle hat mathbf n points in the direction from medium 2 to medium 1 27 Similarly a surface integral of H over any closed surface is independent of the free currents and picks out the magnetic charges within that closed surface S m 0 H d A S B m 0 M d A 0 q M q M displaystyle oint S mu 0 mathbf H cdot mathrm d mathbf A oint S mathbf B mu 0 mathbf M cdot mathrm d mathbf A 0 q mathrm M q mathrm M which does not depend on the free currents The H field therefore can be separated into two note 10 independent parts H H 0 H d displaystyle mathbf H mathbf H 0 mathbf H mathrm d where H0 is the applied magnetic field due only to the free currents and Hd is the demagnetizing field due only to the bound currents The magnetic H field therefore re factors the bound current in terms of magnetic charges The H field lines loop only around free current and unlike the magnetic B field begins and ends near magnetic poles as well Magnetism Main article Magnetism Most materials respond to an applied B field by producing their own magnetization M and therefore their own B fields Typically the response is weak and exists only when the magnetic field is applied The term magnetism describes how materials respond on the microscopic level to an applied magnetic field and is used to categorize the magnetic phase of a material Materials are divided into groups based upon their magnetic behavior Diamagnetic materials 28 produce a magnetization that opposes the magnetic field Paramagnetic materials 28 produce a magnetization in the same direction as the applied magnetic field Ferromagnetic materials and the closely related ferrimagnetic materials and antiferromagnetic materials 29 30 can have a magnetization independent of an applied B field with a complex relationship between the two fields Superconductors and ferromagnetic superconductors 31 32 are materials that are characterized by perfect conductivity below a critical temperature and magnetic field They also are highly magnetic and can be perfect diamagnets below a lower critical magnetic field Superconductors often have a broad range of temperatures and magnetic fields the so named mixed state under which they exhibit a complex hysteretic dependence of M on B In the case of paramagnetism and diamagnetism the magnetization M is often proportional to the applied magnetic field such that B m H displaystyle mathbf B mu mathbf H where m is a material dependent parameter called the permeability In some cases the permeability may be a second rank tensor so that H may not point in the same direction as B These relations between B and H are examples of constitutive equations However superconductors and ferromagnets have a more complex B to H relation see magnetic hysteresis Stored energyMain article Magnetic energy See also Magnetic hysteresis Energy is needed to generate a magnetic field both to work against the electric field that a changing magnetic field creates and to change the magnetization of any material within the magnetic field For non dispersive materials this same energy is released when the magnetic field is destroyed so that the energy can be modeled as being stored in the magnetic field For linear non dispersive materials such that B mH where m is frequency independent the energy density is u B H 2 B B 2 m m H H 2 displaystyle u frac mathbf B cdot mathbf H 2 frac mathbf B cdot mathbf B 2 mu frac mu mathbf H cdot mathbf H 2 If there are no magnetic materials around then m can be replaced by m0 The above equation cannot be used for nonlinear materials though a more general expression given below must be used In general the incremental amount of work per unit volume dW needed to cause a small change of magnetic field dB is d W H d B displaystyle delta W mathbf H cdot delta mathbf B Once the relationship between H and B is known this equation is used to determine the work needed to reach a given magnetic state For hysteretic materials such as ferromagnets and superconductors the work needed also depends on how the magnetic field is created For linear non dispersive materials though the general equation leads directly to the simpler energy density equation given above Appearance in Maxwell s equationsMain article Maxwell s equations See also Electromagnetism Like all vector fields a magnetic field has two important mathematical properties that relates it to its sources For B the sources are currents and changing electric fields These two properties along with the two corresponding properties of the electric field make up Maxwell s Equations Maxwell s Equations together with the Lorentz force law form a complete description of classical electrodynamics including both electricity and magnetism The first property is the divergence of a vector field A A which represents how A flows outward from a given point As discussed above a B field line never starts or ends at a point but instead forms a complete loop This is mathematically equivalent to saying that the divergence of B is zero Such vector fields are called solenoidal vector fields This property is called Gauss s law for magnetism and is equivalent to the statement that there are no isolated magnetic poles or magnetic monopoles The second mathematical property is called the curl such that A represents how A curls or circulates around a given point The result of the curl is called a circulation source The equations for the curl of B and of E are called the Ampere Maxwell equation and Faraday s law respectively Gauss law for magnetism Main article Gauss s law for magnetism One important property of the B field produced this way is that magnetic B field lines neither start nor end mathematically B is a solenoidal vector field a field line may only extend to infinity or wrap around to form a closed curve or follow a never ending possibly chaotic path 33 Magnetic field lines exit a magnet near its north pole and enter near its south pole but inside the magnet B field lines continue through the magnet from the south pole back to the north note 11 If a B field line enters a magnet somewhere it has to leave somewhere else it is not allowed to have an end point More formally since all the magnetic field lines that enter any given region must also leave that region subtracting the number note 12 of field lines that enter the region from the number that exit gives identically zero Mathematically this is equivalent to Gauss s law for magnetism S B d A 0 displaystyle oint S mathbf B cdot mathrm d mathbf A 0 where the integral is a surface integral over the closed surface S a closed surface is one that completely surrounds a region with no holes to let any field lines escape Since dA points outward the dot product in the integral is positive for B field pointing out and negative for B field pointing in Faraday s Law Main article Faraday s law of induction A changing magnetic field such as a magnet moving through a conducting coil generates an electric field and therefore tends to drive a current in such a coil This is known as Faraday s law and forms the basis of many electrical generators and electric motors Mathematically Faraday s law is E d F d t displaystyle mathcal E frac mathrm d Phi mathrm d t where E displaystyle mathcal E is the electromotive force or EMF the voltage generated around a closed loop and F is the magnetic flux the product of the area times the magnetic field normal to that area This definition of magnetic flux is why B is often referred to as magnetic flux density 34 210 The negative sign represents the fact that any current generated by a changing magnetic field in a coil produces a magnetic field that opposes the change in the magnetic field that induced it This phenomenon is known as Lenz s law This integral formulation of Faraday s law can be converted note 13 into a differential form which applies under slightly different conditions E B t displaystyle nabla times mathbf E frac partial mathbf B partial t Ampere s Law and Maxwell s correction Main article Ampere s circuital law Similar to the way that a changing magnetic field generates an electric field a changing electric field generates a magnetic field This fact is known as Maxwell s correction to Ampere s law and is applied as an additive term to Ampere s law as given above This additional term is proportional to the time rate of change of the electric flux and is similar to Faraday s law above but with a different and positive constant out front The electric flux through an area is proportional to the area times the perpendicular part of the electric field The full law including the correction term is known as the Maxwell Ampere equation It is not commonly given in integral form because the effect is so small that it can typically be ignored in most cases where the integral form is used The Maxwell term is critically important in the creation and propagation of electromagnetic waves Maxwell s correction to Ampere s Law together with Faraday s law of induction describes how mutually changing electric and magnetic fields interact to sustain each other and thus to form electromagnetic waves such as light a changing electric field generates a changing magnetic field which generates a changing electric field again These though are usually described using the differential form of this equation given below B m 0 J m 0 e 0 E t displaystyle nabla times mathbf B mu 0 mathbf J mu 0 varepsilon 0 frac partial mathbf E partial t where J is the complete microscopic current density As discussed above materials respond to an applied electric E field and an applied magnetic B field by producing their own internal bound charge and current distributions that contribute to E and B but are difficult to calculate To circumvent this problem H and D fields are used to re factor Maxwell s equations in terms of the free current density Jf H J f D t displaystyle nabla times mathbf H mathbf J mathrm f frac partial mathbf D partial t These equations are not any more general than the original equations if the bound charges and currents in the material are known They also must be supplemented by the relationship between B and H as well as that between E and D On the other hand for simple relationships between these quantities this form of Maxwell s equations can circumvent the need to calculate the bound charges and currents Formulation in special relativity and quantum electrodynamicsRelativistic Electrodynamics Main article Relativistic electromagnetism As different aspects of the same phenomenon According to the special theory of relativity the partition of the electromagnetic force into separate electric and magnetic components is not fundamental but varies with the observational frame of reference An electric force perceived by one observer may be perceived by another in a different frame of reference as a magnetic force or a mixture of electric and magnetic forces The magnetic field existing as electric field in other frames can be shown by consistency of equations obtained from Lorentz transformation of four force from Coulomb s Law in particle s rest frame with Maxwell s laws considering definition of fields from Lorentz force and for non accelerating condition The form of magnetic field hence obtained by Lorentz transformation of four force from the form of Coulomb s law in source s initial frame is given by 35 B q 4 p ϵ 0 r 3 1 b 2 1 b 2 sin 2 8 3 2 v r c 2 v E c 2 displaystyle mathbf B frac q 4 pi epsilon 0 r 3 frac 1 beta 2 1 beta 2 sin 2 theta 3 2 frac mathbf v times mathbf r c 2 frac mathbf v times mathbf E c 2 where q displaystyle q is the charge of the point source r displaystyle mathbf r is the position vector from the point source to the point in space v displaystyle mathbf v is the velocity vector of the charged particle b displaystyle beta is the ratio of speed of the charged particle divided by the speed of light and 8 displaystyle theta is the angle between r displaystyle mathbf r and v displaystyle mathbf v This form of magnetic field can be shown to satisfy maxwell s laws within the constraint of particle being non accelerating 36 Note that the above reduces to Biot Savart law for non relativistic stream of current b 1 displaystyle beta ll 1 Formally special relativity combines the electric and magnetic fields into a rank 2 tensor called the electromagnetic tensor Changing reference frames mixes these components This is analogous to the way that special relativity mixes space and time into spacetime and mass momentum and energy into four momentum 37 Similarly the energy stored in a magnetic field is mixed with the energy stored in an electric field in the electromagnetic stress energy tensor Magnetic vector potential Main article Magnetic vector potential In advanced topics such as quantum mechanics and relativity it is often easier to work with a potential formulation of electrodynamics rather than in terms of the electric and magnetic fields In this representation the magnetic vector potential A and the electric scalar potential f are defined using gauge fixing such that B A E f A t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf B amp nabla times mathbf A mathbf E amp nabla varphi frac partial mathbf A partial t end aligned The vector potential A given by this form may be interpreted as a generalized potential momentum per unit charge 38 just as f is interpreted as a generalized potential energy per unit charge There are multiple choices one can make for the potential fields that satisfy the above condition However the choice of potentials is represented by its respective gauge condition Maxwell s equations when expressed in terms of the potentials in Lorentz gauge can be cast into a form that agrees with special relativity 39 In relativity A together with f forms a four potential regardless of the gauge condition analogous to the four momentum that combines the momentum and energy of a particle Using the four potential instead of the electromagnetic tensor has the advantage of being much simpler and it can be easily modified to work with quantum mechanics Propagation of Electric and Magnetic fields Special theory of relativity imposes the condition for events related by cause and effect to be time like separated that is that causal efficacy propagates no faster than light 40 Maxwell s equations for electromagnetism are found to be in favor of this as electric and magnetic disturbances are found to travel at the speed of light in space Electric and magnetic fields from classical electrodynamics obey the principle of locality in physics and are expressed in terms of retarded time or the time at which the cause of a measured field originated given that the influence of field travelled at speed of light The retarded time for a point particle is given as solution of t r t r r s t r c displaystyle t r mathbf t frac mathbf r mathbf r s t r c where t r textstyle t r is retarded time or the time at which the source s contribution of the field originated r s t textstyle r s t is the position vector of the particle as function of time r textstyle mathbf r is the point in space t textstyle mathbf t is the time at which fields are measured and c textstyle c is the speed of light The equation subtracts the time taken for light to travel from particle to the point in space from the time of measurement to find time of origin of the fields The uniqueness of solution for t r textstyle t r for given t displaystyle mathbf t r displaystyle mathbf r and r s t displaystyle r s t is valid for charged particles moving slower than speed of light 41 Magnetic field of arbitrary moving point charge Main article Lienard Wiechert potential The solution of maxwell s equations for electric and magnetic field of a point charge is expressed in terms of retarded time or the time at which the particle in the past causes the field at the point given that the influence travels across space at the speed of light Any arbitrary motion of point charge causes electric and magnetic fields found by solving maxwell s equations using green s function for retarded potentials and hence finding the fields to be as follows A r t m 0 c 4 p q b s 1 n s b s r r s t t r b s t r c f r t displaystyle mathbf A mathbf r mathbf t frac mu 0 c 4 pi left frac q boldsymbol beta s 1 mathbf n s cdot boldsymbol beta s mathbf r mathbf r s right t t r frac boldsymbol beta s t r c varphi mathbf r mathbf t B r t m 0 4 p q c b s n s g 2 1 n s b s 3 r r s 2 q n s n s n s b s b s 1 n s b s 3 r r s t t r n s t r c E r t displaystyle mathbf B mathbf r mathbf t frac mu 0 4 pi left frac qc boldsymbol beta s times mathbf n s gamma 2 1 mathbf n s cdot boldsymbol beta s 3 mathbf r mathbf r s 2 frac q mathbf n s times Big mathbf n s times big mathbf n s boldsymbol beta s times dot boldsymbol beta s big Big 1 mathbf n s cdot boldsymbol beta s 3 mathbf r mathbf r s right t t r frac mathbf n s t r c times mathbf E mathbf r mathbf t where f r t textstyle varphi mathbf r mathbf t and A r t textstyle mathbf A mathbf r mathbf t are electric scalar potential and magnetic vector potential in Lorentz gauge q displaystyle q is the charge of the point source n s r t textstyle n s mathbf r t is a unit vector pointing from charged particle to the point in space b s t textstyle boldsymbol beta s t is the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light and g t textstyle gamma t is the corresponding Lorentz factor Hence by the principle of superposition the fields of a system of charges also obey principle of locality Quantum electrodynamics See also Standard Model and quantum electrodynamics In modern physics the electromagnetic field is understood to be not a classical field but rather a quantum field it is represented not as a vector of three numbers at each point but as a vector of three quantum operators at each point The most accurate modern description of the electromagnetic interaction and much else is quantum electrodynamics QED 42 which is incorporated into a more complete theory known as the Standard Model of particle physics In QED the magnitude of the electromagnetic interactions between charged particles and their antiparticles is computed using perturbation theory These rather complex formulas produce a remarkable pictorial representation as Feynman diagrams in which virtual photons are exchanged Predictions of QED agree with experiments to an extremely high degree of accuracy currently about 10 12 and limited by experimental errors for details see precision tests of QED This makes QED one of the most accurate physical theories constructed thus far All equations in this article are in the classical approximation which is less accurate than the quantum description mentioned here However under most everyday circumstances the difference between the two theories is negligible Uses and examplesEarth s magnetic field Main article Earth s magnetic field A sketch of Earth s magnetic field representing the source of the field as a magnet The south pole of the magnetic field is near the geographic north pole of the Earth The Earth s magnetic field is produced by convection of a liquid iron alloy in the outer core In a dynamo process the movements drive a feedback process in which electric currents create electric and magnetic fields that in turn act on the currents 43 The field at the surface of the Earth is approximately the same as if a giant bar magnet were positioned at the center of the Earth and tilted at an angle of about 11 off the rotational axis of the Earth see the figure 44 The north pole of a magnetic compass needle points roughly north toward the North Magnetic Pole However because a magnetic pole is attracted to its opposite the North Magnetic Pole is actually the south pole of the geomagnetic field This confusion in terminology arises because the pole of a magnet is defined by the geographical direction it points 45 Earth s magnetic field is not constant the strength of the field and the location of its poles vary 46 Moreover the poles periodically reverse their orientation in a process called geomagnetic reversal The most recent reversal occurred 780 000 years ago 47 Rotating magnetic fields Main articles Rotating magnetic field and Alternator The rotating magnetic field is a key principle in the operation of alternating current motors A permanent magnet in such a field rotates so as to maintain its alignment with the external field This effect was conceptualized by Nikola Tesla and later utilized in his and others early AC alternating current electric motors Magnetic torque is used to drive electric motors In one simple motor design a magnet is fixed to a freely rotating shaft and subjected to a magnetic field from an array of electromagnets By continuously switching the electric current through each of the electromagnets thereby flipping the polarity of their magnetic fields like poles are kept next to the rotor the resultant torque is transferred to the shaft A rotating magnetic field can be constructed using two orthogonal coils with 90 degrees phase difference in their AC currents However in practice such a system would be supplied through a three wire arrangement with unequal currents This inequality would cause serious problems in standardization of the conductor size and so to overcome it three phase systems are used where the three currents are equal in magnitude and have 120 degrees phase difference Three similar coils having mutual geometrical angles of 120 degrees create the rotating magnetic field in this case The ability of the three phase system to create a rotating field utilized in electric motors is one of the main reasons why three phase systems dominate the world s electrical power supply systems Synchronous motors use DC voltage fed rotor windings which lets the excitation of the machine be controlled and induction motors use short circuited rotors instead of a magnet following the rotating magnetic field of a multicoiled stator The short circuited turns of the rotor develop eddy currents in the rotating field of the stator and these currents in turn move the rotor by the Lorentz force In 1882 Nikola Tesla identified the concept of the rotating magnetic field In 1885 Galileo Ferraris independently researched the concept In 1888 Tesla gained U S Patent 381 968 for his work Also in 1888 Ferraris published his research in a paper to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Turin Hall effect Main article Hall effect The charge carriers of a current carrying conductor placed in a transverse magnetic field experience a sideways Lorentz force this results in a charge separation in a direction perpendicular to the current and to the magnetic field The resultant voltage in that direction is proportional to the applied magnetic field This is known as the Hall effect The Hall effect is often used to measure the magnitude of a magnetic field It is used as well to find the sign of the dominant charge carriers in materials such as semiconductors negative electrons or positive holes Magnetic circuits Main article Magnetic circuit An important use of H is in magnetic circuits where B mH inside a linear material Here m is the magnetic permeability of the material This result is similar in form to Ohm s law J sE where J is the current density s is the conductance and E is the electric field Extending this analogy the counterpart to the macroscopic Ohm s law I V R is F F R m displaystyle Phi frac F R mathrm m where F B d A textstyle Phi int mathbf B cdot mathrm d mathbf A is the magnetic flux in the circuit F H d ℓ textstyle F int mathbf H cdot mathrm d boldsymbol ell is the magnetomotive force applied to the circuit and Rm is the reluctance of the circuit Here the reluctance Rm is a quantity similar in nature to resistance for the flux Using this analogy it is straightforward to calculate the magnetic flux of complicated magnetic field geometries by using all the available techniques of circuit theory Largest magnetic fields This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information Last update October 2018 July 2021 As of October 2018 update the largest magnetic field produced over a macroscopic volume outside a lab setting is 2 8 kT VNIIEF in Sarov Russia 1998 48 49 As of October 2018 the largest magnetic field produced in a laboratory over a macroscopic volume was 1 2 kT by researchers at the University of Tokyo in 2018 49 The largest magnetic fields produced in a laboratory occur in particle accelerators such as RHIC inside the collisions of heavy ions where microscopic fields reach 1014 T 50 51 Magnetars have the strongest known magnetic fields of any naturally occurring object ranging from 0 1 to 100 GT 108 to 1011 T 52 HistoryMain article History of electromagnetic theory See also Timeline of electromagnetism and classical optics One of the first drawings of a magnetic field by Rene Descartes 1644 showing the Earth attracting lodestones It illustrated his theory that magnetism was caused by the circulation of tiny helical particles threaded parts through threaded pores in magnets Early developments While magnets and some properties of magnetism were known to ancient societies the research of magnetic fields began in 1269 when French scholar Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt mapped out the magnetic field on the surface of a spherical magnet using iron needles Noting the resulting field lines crossed at two points he named those points poles in analogy to Earth s poles He also articulated the principle that magnets always have both a north and south pole no matter how finely one slices them 53 note 14 Almost three centuries later William Gilbert of Colchester replicated Petrus Peregrinus s work and was the first to state explicitly that Earth is a magnet 54 34 Published in 1600 Gilbert s work De Magnete helped to establish magnetism as a science Mathematical development Hans Christian Orsted Der Geist in der Natur 1854 In 1750 John Michell stated that magnetic poles attract and repel in accordance with an inverse square law 54 56 Charles Augustin de Coulomb experimentally verified this in 1785 and stated explicitly that north and south poles cannot be separated 54 59 Building on this force between poles Simeon Denis Poisson 1781 1840 created the first successful model of the magnetic field which he presented in 1824 54 64 In this model a magnetic H field is produced by magnetic poles and magnetism is due to small pairs of north south magnetic poles Three discoveries in 1820 challenged this foundation of magnetism Hans Christian Orsted demonstrated that a current carrying wire is surrounded by a circular magnetic field note 15 55 Then Andre Marie Ampere showed that parallel wires with currents attract one another if the currents are in the same direction and repel if they are in opposite directions 54 87 56 Finally Jean Baptiste Biot and Felix Savart announced empirical results about the forces that a current carrying long straight wire exerted on a small magnet determining the forces were inversely proportional to the perpendicular distance from the wire to the magnet 57 54 86 Laplace later deduced a law of force based on the differential action of a differential section of the wire 57 58 which became known as the Biot Savart law as Laplace did not publish his findings 59 Extending these experiments Ampere published his own successful model of magnetism in 1825 In it he showed the equivalence of electrical currents to magnets 54 88 and proposed that magnetism is due to perpetually flowing loops of current instead of the dipoles of magnetic charge in Poisson s model note 16 Further Ampere derived both Ampere s force law describing the force between two currents and Ampere s law which like the Biot Savart law correctly described the magnetic field generated by a steady current Also in this work Ampere introduced the term electrodynamics to describe the relationship between electricity and magnetism 54 88 92 In 1831 Michael Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction when he found that a changing magnetic field generates an encircling electric field formulating what is now known as Faraday s law of induction 54 189 192 Later Franz Ernst Neumann proved that for a moving conductor in a magnetic field induction is a consequence of Ampere s force law 54 222 In the process he introduced the magnetic vector potential which was later shown to be equivalent to the underlying mechanism proposed by Faraday 54 225 In 1850 Lord Kelvin then known as William Thomson distinguished between two magnetic fields now denoted H and B The former applied to Poisson s model and the latter to Ampere s model and induction 54 224 Further he derived how H and B relate to each other and coined the term permeability 54 245 60 Between 1861 and 1865 James Clerk Maxwell developed and published Maxwell s equations which explained and united all of classical electricity and magnetism The first set of these equations was published in a paper entitled On Physical Lines of Force in 1861 These equations were valid but incomplete Maxwell completed his set of equations in his later 1865 paper A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field and demonstrated the fact that light is an electromagnetic wave Heinrich Hertz published papers in 1887 and 1888 experimentally confirming this fact 61 62 Modern developments In 1887 Tesla developed an induction motor that ran on alternating current The motor used polyphase current which generated a rotating magnetic field to turn the motor a principle that Tesla claimed to have conceived in 1882 63 64 65 Tesla received a patent for his electric motor in May 1888 66 67 In 1885 Galileo Ferraris independently researched rotating magnetic fields and subsequently published his research in a paper to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Turin just two months before Tesla was awarded his patent in March 1888 68 The twentieth century showed that classical electrodynamics is already consistent with special relativity and extended classical electrodynamics to work with quantum mechanics Albert Einstein in his paper of 1905 that established relativity showed that both the electric and magnetic fields are part of the same phenomena viewed from different reference frames Finally the emergent field of quantum mechanics was merged with electrodynamics to form quantum electrodynamics which first formalized the notion that electromagnetic field energy is quantized in the form of photons See alsoGeneral Magnetohydrodynamics the study of the dynamics of electrically conducting fluids Magnetic hysteresis application to ferromagnetism Magnetic nanoparticles extremely small magnetic particles that are tens of atoms wide Magnetic reconnection an effect that causes solar flares and auroras Magnetic scalar potential SI electromagnetism units common units used in electromagnetism Orders of magnitude magnetic field list of magnetic field sources and measurement devices from smallest magnetic fields to largest detected Upward continuation Moses EffectMathematics Magnetic helicity extent to which a magnetic field wraps around itselfApplications Dynamo theory a proposed mechanism for the creation of the Earth s magnetic field Helmholtz coil a device for producing a region of nearly uniform magnetic field Magnetic field viewing film Film used to view the magnetic field of an area Magnetic pistol a device on torpedoes or naval mines that detect the magnetic field of their target Maxwell coil a device for producing a large volume of an almost constant magnetic field Stellar magnetic field a discussion of the magnetic field of stars Teltron tube device used to display an electron beam and demonstrates effect of electric and magnetic fields on moving chargesNotes The letters B and H were originally chosen by Maxwell in his Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism Vol II pp 236 237 For many quantities he simply started choosing letters from the beginning of the alphabet See Ralph Baierlein 2000 Answer to Question 73 S is for entropy Q is for charge American Journal of Physics 68 8 691 Bibcode 2000AmJPh 68 691B doi 10 1119 1 19524 Edward Purcell in Electricity and Magnetism McGraw Hill 1963 writes Even some modern writers who treat B as the primary field feel obliged to call it the magnetic induction because the name magnetic field was historically preempted by H This seems clumsy and pedantic If you go into the laboratory and ask a physicist what causes the pion trajectories in his bubble chamber to curve he ll probably answer magnetic field not magnetic induction You will seldom hear a geophysicist refer to the Earth s magnetic induction or an astrophysicist talk about the magnetic induction of the galaxy We propose to keep on calling B the magnetic field As for H although other names have been invented for it we shall call it the field H or even the magnetic field H In a similar vein M Gerloch 1983 Magnetism and Ligand field Analysis Cambridge University Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 521 24939 3 says So we may think of both B and H as magnetic fields but drop the word magnetic from H so as to maintain the distinction As Purcell points out it is only the names that give trouble not the symbols An alternative mnemonic to the right hand rule is Fleming s left hand rule The SI unit of FB magnetic flux is the weber symbol Wb related to the tesla by 1 Wb m2 1 T The SI unit tesla is equal to newton second coulomb metre This can be seen from the magnetic part of the Lorentz force law The use of iron filings to display a field presents something of an exception to this picture the filings alter the magnetic field so that it is much larger along the lines of iron because of the large permeability of iron relative to air Here small means that the observer is sufficiently far away from the magnet so that the magnet can be considered as infinitesimally small Larger magnets need to include more complicated terms in the expression clarification needed referent of expression and depend on the entire geometry of the magnet not just m Either B or H may be used for the magnetic field outside the magnet In practice the Biot Savart law and other laws of magnetostatics are often used even when a current change in time as long as it does not change too quickly It is often used for instance for standard household currents which oscillate sixty times per second 20 223 The Biot Savart law contains the additional restriction boundary condition that the B field must go to zero fast enough at infinity It also depends on the divergence of B being zero which is always valid There are no magnetic charges A third term is needed for changing electric fields and polarization currents this displacement current term is covered in Maxwell s equations below To see that this must be true imagine placing a compass inside a magnet There the north pole of the compass points toward the north pole of the magnet since magnets stacked on each other point in the same direction As discussed above magnetic field lines are primarily a conceptual tool used to represent the mathematics behind magnetic fields The total number of field lines is dependent on how the field lines are drawn In practice integral equations such as the one that follows in the main text are used instead A complete expression for Faraday s law of induction in terms of the electric E and magnetic fields can be written as E d F d t S t E r t v B r t d ℓ d d t S t d A B r t displaystyle mathcal E frac d Phi dt oint partial Sigma t left mathbf E mathbf r t mathbf v times mathbf B mathbf r t right cdot d boldsymbol ell frac d dt iint Sigma t d boldsymbol A cdot mathbf B mathbf r t where S t is the moving closed path bounding the moving surface S t and dA is an element of surface area of S t The first integral calculates the work done moving a charge a distance dℓ based upon the Lorentz force law In the case where the bounding surface is stationary the Kelvin Stokes theorem can be used to show this equation is equivalent to the Maxwell Faraday equation His Epistola Petri Peregrini de Maricourt ad Sygerum de Foucaucourt Militem de Magnete which is often shortened to Epistola de magnete is dated 1269 C E During a lecture demonstration on the effects of a current on a campus needle Orsted showed that when a current carrying wire is placed at a right angle with the compass nothing happens When he tried to orient the wire parallel to the compass needle however it produced a pronounced deflection of the compass needle By placing the compass on different sides of the wire he was able to determine the field forms perfect circles around the wire 54 85 From the outside the field of a dipole of magnetic charge has exactly the same form as a current loop when both are sufficiently small Therefore the two models differ only for magnetism inside magnetic material References a b c d e f Feynman Richard P Leighton Robert B Sands Matthew 1963 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol 2 California Institute of Technology ISBN 9780465040858 Young Hugh D Freedman Roger A Ford A Lewis 2008 Sears and Zemansky s university physics with modern physics Vol 2 Pearson Addison Wesley pp 918 919 ISBN 9780321501219 Purcell Edward M Morin David J 2013 Electricity and Magnetism 3rd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107014022 a b c d Le Systeme international d unites The International System of Units PDF in French and English 9th ed International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2019 ISBN 978 92 822 2272 0 Jiles David C 1998 Introduction to Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 2 ed CRC p 3 ISBN 978 0412798603 John J Roche 2000 B and H the intensity vectors of magnetism A new approach to resolving a century old controversy American Journal of Physics 68 5 438 Bibcode 2000AmJPh 68 438R doi 10 1119 1 19459 a b E J Rothwell and M J Cloud 2010 Electromagnetics Taylor amp Francis p 23 ISBN 1420058266 a b Stratton Julius Adams 1941 Electromagnetic Theory 1st ed McGraw Hill p 1 ISBN 978 0070621503 a b c d e Purcell E 2011 Electricity and Magnetism 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107013605 a b c d Griffiths David J 1981 Introduction to Electrodynamics 3rd ed Perason ISBN 0 13 805326 X a b Jackson John David 1998 Classical electrodynamics 3rd ed New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 30932 X a b Non SI units accepted for use with the SI and units based on fundamental constants contd SI Brochure The International System of Units SI 8th edition 2006 updated in 2014 Bureau International des Poids et Mesures Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 19 April 2018 a b Lang Kenneth R 2006 A Companion to Astronomy and Astrophysics Springer p 176 ISBN 9780387333670 Retrieved 19 April 2018 International system of units SI NIST reference on constants units and uncertainty National Institute of Standards and Technology Retrieved 9 May 2012 Gravity Probe B Executive Summary PDF pp 10 21 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Brown William Fuller 1962 Magnetostatic Principles in Ferromagnetism North Holland publishing company p 12 ASIN B0006AY7F8 See magnetic moment and B D Cullity C D Graham 2008 Introduction to Magnetic Materials 2 ed Wiley IEEE p 103 ISBN 978 0 471 47741 9 E Richard Cohen David R Lide George L Trigg 2003 AIP physics desk reference 3 ed Birkhauser p 381 ISBN 978 0 387 98973 0 Griffiths 1999 p 438harvnb error no target CITEREFGriffiths1999 help a b c Griffiths David J 2017 Introduction to Electrodynamics 4th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108357142 Griffiths 1999 pp 222 225harvnb error no target CITEREFGriffiths1999 help K McDonald s Physics Examples Disk PDF puhep1 princeton edu Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2021 K McDonald s Physics Examples Railgun PDF puhep1 princeton edu Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2021 Deissler R J 2008 Dipole in a magnetic field work and quantum spin PDF Physical Review E 77 3 pt 2 036609 Bibcode 2008PhRvE 77c6609D doi 10 1103 PhysRevE 77 036609 PMID 18517545 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Griffiths 1999 pp 266 268harvnb error no target CITEREFGriffiths1999 help John Clarke Slater Nathaniel Herman Frank 1969 Electromagnetism first published in 1947 ed Courier Dover Publications p 69 ISBN 978 0 486 62263 7 Griffiths 1999 p 332harvnb error no target CITEREFGriffiths1999 help a b RJD Tilley 2004 Understanding Solids Wiley p 368 ISBN 978 0 470 85275 0 Sōshin Chikazumi Chad D Graham 1997 Physics of ferromagnetism 2 ed Oxford University Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 19 851776 4 Amikam Aharoni 2000 Introduction to the theory of ferromagnetism 2 ed Oxford University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 19 850808 3 M Brian Maple et al 2008 Unconventional superconductivity in novel materials In K H Bennemann John B Ketterson eds Superconductivity Springer p 640 ISBN 978 3 540 73252 5 Naoum Karchev 2003 Itinerant ferromagnetism and superconductivity In Paul S Lewis D Di CON Castro eds Superconductivity research at the leading edge Nova Publishers p 169 ISBN 978 1 59033 861 2 Lieberherr Martin 6 July 2010 The magnetic field lines of a helical coil are not simple loops American Journal of Physics 78 11 1117 1119 Bibcode 2010AmJPh 78 1117L doi 10 1119 1 3471233 Jackson John David 1975 Classical electrodynamics 2nd ed New York Wiley ISBN 9780471431329 Rosser W G V 1968 Classical Electromagnetism via Relativity pp 29 42 doi 10 1007 978 1 4899 6559 2 ISBN 978 1 4899 6258 4 Purcell Edward 22 September 2011 Electricity and Magnetism Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9781139005043 ISBN 978 1 107 01360 5 C Doran and A Lasenby 2003 Geometric Algebra for Physicists Cambridge University Press p 233 ISBN 0521715954 E J Konopinski 1978 What the electromagnetic vector potential describes Am J Phys 46 5 499 502 Bibcode 1978AmJPh 46 499K doi 10 1119 1 11298 Griffiths 1999 p 422harvnb error no target CITEREFGriffiths1999 help Naber Gregory L 2012 The Geometry of Minkowski spacetime an introduction to the mathematics of the special theory of relativity Springer pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 4419 7837 0 OCLC 804823303 Rosser W G V 1968 Classical Electromagnetism via Relativity doi 10 1007 978 1 4899 6559 2 ISBN 978 1 4899 6258 4 For a good qualitative introduction see Richard Feynman 2006 QED the strange theory of light and matter Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 12575 6 Weiss Nigel 2002 Dynamos in planets stars and galaxies Astronomy and Geophysics 43 3 3 09 3 15 Bibcode 2002A amp G 43c 9W doi 10 1046 j 1468 4004 2002 43309 x What is the Earth s magnetic field Geomagnetism Frequently Asked Questions National Centers for Environmental Information National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 19 April 2018 Raymond A Serway Chris Vuille Jerry S Faughn 2009 College physics 8th ed Belmont CA Brooks Cole Cengage Learning p 628 ISBN 978 0 495 38693 3 Merrill Ronald T McElhinny Michael W McFadden Phillip L 1996 2 The present geomagnetic field analysis and description from historical observations The magnetic field of the earth paleomagnetism the core and the deep mantle Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 491246 5 Phillips Tony 29 December 2003 Earth s Inconstant Magnetic Field Science Nasa Retrieved 27 December 2009 Boyko B A Bykov A I Dolotenko M I Kolokolchikov N P Markevtsev I M Tatsenko O M Shuvalov K 1999 With record magnetic fields to the 21st Century Digest of Technical Papers 12th IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference Cat No 99CH36358 IEEE Xplore Vol 2 pp 746 749 doi 10 1109 PPC 1999 823621 ISBN 0 7803 5498 2 S2CID 42588549 a b Daley Jason Watch the Strongest Indoor Magnetic Field Blast Doors of Tokyo Lab Wide Open Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 8 September 2020 Tuchin Kirill 2013 Particle production in strong electromagnetic fields in relativistic heavy ion collisions Adv High Energy Phys 2013 490495 arXiv 1301 0099 Bibcode 2013arXiv1301 0099T doi 10 1155 2013 490495 S2CID 4877952 Bzdak Adam Skokov Vladimir 29 March 2012 Event by event fluctuations of magnetic and electric fields in heavy ion collisions Physics Letters B 710 1 171 174 arXiv 1111 1949 Bibcode 2012PhLB 710 171B doi 10 1016 j physletb 2012 02 065 S2CID 118462584 Kouveliotou C Duncan R C Thompson C February 2003 Magnetars Archived 11 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Scientific American Page 36 Peregrinus Petrus Flourished 1269 SpringerReference Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag 2011 doi 10 1007 springerreference 77755 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Whittaker E T 1910 A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 26126 3 Williams L Pearce 1974 Oersted Hans Christian In Gillespie C C ed Dictionary of Scientific Biography New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 185 Blundell Stephen J 2012 Magnetism A Very Short Introduction OUP Oxford p 31 ISBN 9780191633720 a b Tricker R A R 1965 Early electrodynamics Oxford Pergamon p 23 Erlichson Herman 1998 The experiments of Biot and Savart concerning the force exerted by a current on a magnetic needle American Journal of Physics 66 5 389 Bibcode 1998AmJPh 66 385E doi 10 1119 1 18878 Frankel Eugene 1972 Jean Baptiste Biot The career of a physicist in nineteenth century France Princeton University Doctoral dissertation p 334 Lord Kelvin of Largs physik uni augsburg de 26 June 1824 Huurdeman Anton A 2003 The Worldwide History of Telecommunications Wiley ISBN 0471205052 p 202 The most important Experiments The most important Experiments and their Publication between 1886 and 1889 Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute Retrieved 19 February 2016 Networks of Power Electrification in Western Society 1880 1930 JHU Press March 1993 p 117 ISBN 9780801846144 Thomas Parke Hughes Networks of Power Electrification in Western Society 1880 1930 pp 115 118 Ltd Nmsi Trading Smithsonian Institution 1998 Robert Bud Instruments of Science An Historical Encyclopedia p 204 ISBN 9780815315612 Retrieved 18 March 2013 U S Patent 381 968 Porter H F J Prout Henry G January 1924 A Life of George Westinghouse The American Historical Review 29 2 129 doi 10 2307 1838546 hdl 2027 coo1 ark 13960 t15m6rz0r ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1838546 Galileo Ferraris March 1888 Rotazioni elettrodinamiche prodotte per mezzo di correnti alternate Electrodynamic rotations by means of alternating currents memory read at Accademia delle Scienze Torino in Opere di Galileo Ferraris Hoepli Milano 1902 vol I pages 333 to 348Further readingJiles David 1994 Introduction to Electronic Properties of Materials 1st ed Springer ISBN 978 0 412 49580 9 Tipler Paul 2004 Physics for Scientists and Engineers Electricity Magnetism Light and Elementary Modern Physics 5th ed W H Freeman ISBN 978 0 7167 0810 0 OCLC 51095685 External links Media related to Magnetic fields at Wikimedia Commons Crowell B Electromagnetism Nave R Magnetic Field HyperPhysics Magnetism The Magnetic Field archived 9 July 2006 theory uwinnipeg ca Hoadley Rick What do magnetic fields look like 17 July 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magnetic field amp oldid 1135886156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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