Magnetism Electromagnetism
Magnetism Electromagnetism
&
ELECTROMAGNETISM
A brief history
1600 William Gilbert, On magnetism; magnetic materials;
poles that attract & repel; Earth’s magnetic field, compass ‘dip’
1820 Hans Christian Oersted finds that an electric current deflects
a compass needle.
1820 Andre Marie Ampère finds that parallel wires
carrying current produce forces on each other.
1820s, 1830s Michael Faraday develops the concept of
electric field and shows that
electric current + magnetism -> motion (motor effect)
motion + magnetism -> electric current (electromagnetic induction)
Magnetism 3
Types of Magnetic Materials
1. Paramagnetic materials
• The materials which are not strongly attracted
to a magnet are known as paramagnetic
material. For example: aluminium, tin
magnesium etc. Their relative permeability is
small but positive.
2. Diamagnetic materials
• The materials which are repelled by a magnet
such as zinc. mercury, lead, sulfur, copper,
silver, bismuth, wood etc., are known as
diamagnetic materials. Their permeability is
slightly less than one. For example the relative
permeability of bismuth is 0.00083, copper is
0.000005 and wood is 0.9999995.
3. Ferromagnetic materials
• The materials which are strongly attracted by
a magnetic field or magnet is known as
ferromagnetic material for eg: iron, steel ,
nickel, cobalt etc. The permeability of these
materials is very very high ( ranging up to
several hundred or thousand).
• Permeability- A property of a material that
describes the ease with which a magnetic flux
is established in the component.
Magnetism 8
Describing a magnetic field
Field lines indicate both direction and magnitude
(strength) of a magnetic field. They end at poles.
Bar magnet
Demagnetise a magnet
• by dropping or banging randomly
• by heating
• by applying a diminishing AC current
Magnetic induction
A permanent magnet can induce temporary magnetism
in a ‘soft’ magnetic material.
• This causes attraction, but cannot cause repulsion.
• Use repulsion to test if an object is already magnetised.
Magnetic field of a straight wire
NB: Here
field lines
are closed
loops.
N S
Magnetism 18
Applications
• Motors
• Navigation – Compass
• Magnetic Tapes
– Music, Data
• Television
– Beam deflection Coil
• Magnetic Resonance Imaging
• High Energy Physics Research
Magnetism 19
Motors everywhere
lifts & escalators; fans, turbines, drills; wheelchairs; car windscreen
wipers, starter motors, windows & side mirrors; motors in electric
cars, locomotives & conveyor belts; industrial robots, saws and
blades in cutting and slicing processes; food mixers & blenders,
microwave ovens; hand power tools such as drills, sanders,
routers; electric toothbrushes, shavers, hairdryers; vacuum
cleaners, sound systems, computers …
Fleming’s
left hand
rule
Model loudspeaker
http://www.nuffieldfoundation.org/practical-physics/model-
loudspeaker
homopolar motor
Parallel currents
mo I1I 2
F=
2πr
AC generator
Motor/generator
SEP unit
Transformer
Magnets
• Like Poles Repel
• Opposite Poles
Attract
SN
• Magnetic Poles are
only found in pairs.
– No magnetic
monopoles have
ever been
Shaded End is NORTH Pole observed.
Shaded End of a compass points
to the NORTH.
Magnetism 29
+
Observations
+ +
Magnetism 31
Consider a Permanent Magnet
B
N S
Magnetism 32
Introduce Another Permanent Magnet
B
N
N S
pivot
The bar magnet (a magnetic dipole) wants to align with the B-field.
Magnetism 33
Field of a Permanent Magnet
B
N
N S
The bar magnet (a magnetic dipole) wants to align with the B-field.
Magnetism 36
Convention For Magnetic Fields
X
B
Field INTO Paper Field OUT of Paper
Magnetism 37
Experiments with Magnets Show
• Current carrying wire produces a circular
magnetic field around it.
Current into
the page.
Magnetism 39
Current Carrying Wire
• B field is created at ALL POINTS in space
surrounding the wire.
• The B field had magnitude and direction.
• Force on a magnet increases with the current.
• Force is found to vary as ~(1/d) from the wire.
Magnetism 40
Compass and B Field
• Observations
– North Pole of magnets
tend to move toward the
direction of B while S
pole goes the other way.
– Field exerts a TORQUE on
a compass needle.
– Compass needle is a
magnetic dipole.
– North Pole of compass
points toward the
NORTH.
Magnetism 41
Planet Earth
Magnetism 42
Inside it all.
8000
Miles
Magnetism 43
In Between
• The molten iron core exists in a magnetic field that
had been created from other sources (sun…).
• The fluid is rotating in this field.
• This motion causes a current in the molten metal.
• The current causes a magnetic field.
• The process is self-sustaining.
• The driving force is the heat (energy) that is
generated in the core of the planet.
Magnetism 44
After molten lava emerges from a volcano, it solidifies to a rock. In most
cases it is a black rock known as basalt, which is faintly magnetic, like
iron emerging from a melt. Its magnetization is in the direction of the
local magnetic force at the time when it cools down.
Magnetism 45
Ancient Navigation
Magnetism 46
This planet is really screwed up!
NORTH
POLE
SOUTH POLE
Magnetism 47
Repeat
Navigation
Navigation
DIRECTION
DIRECTION
N
If N direction S
is pointed to by
the NORTH pole
of the Compass
Needle, then the
pole at the NORTH
of our planet must
be a SOUTH MAGNETIC
Compass POLE!
S
Direction N
Magnetism 48
Magnetism 49
teslas are
Magnetism 50
So…
• A moving charge can create a magnetic
field.
• A moving charge is acted upon by a
magnetic field.
Current = i
mg
iLB mg
Where does B point???? Into the paper.
mg
B
iL
Magnetism 53
MagLev
Magnetism 54
Magnetic Repulsion
Magnetism 55
Detail
Magnetism 56
Moving Right Along ….
Magnetism 57
Acceleration
Magnetism 58