Representing Magnetic Fields
- A magnetic field is a region of space in which a magnetic pole will experience a force
- A magnetic field is created either by:
- Moving electric charge
- Permanent magnets
- Permanent magnets are materials that produce a magnetic field
- A stationary charge will not produce a magnetic field
- A magnetic field is sometimes referred to as a B-field
- A magnetic field is created around a current-carrying wire due to the movement of electrons
- Although magnetic fields are invisible, they can be observed by the force that pulls on magnetic materials, such as iron or the movement of a needle in a plotting compass
Magnetic Flux Density
- The strength of a magnetic field can be described by the density of its field lines
- The magnetic flux density B of a field is defined as
The number of magnetic field lines passing through a region of space per unit area
- Magnetic flux density is measured in teslas (T)
- One tesla, 1 T, is defined as
The flux density that causes a force of 1 N on a 1 m wire carrying a current of 1 A at right angles to the field
- The higher the flux density, the stronger the magnetic field i.e. regions where field lines are closer together
- The lower the flux density, the weaker the magnetic field i.e. regions where field lines are further apart
Representing Magnetic Fields
- Like with electric fields, field lines are used to represent the direction and magnitude of a magnetic field
- In a magnetic field, field lines are always directed from the north pole to the south pole
The magnetic field lines around a bar magnet show the field is strongest at the two poles
- The simplest representation of magnetic field lines can be seen around bar magnets
- These can be mapped using iron filings or plotting compasses
- The key aspects of drawing magnetic field lines are:
- Arrows point out of a north pole and into a south pole
- The direction of the field line shows the direction of the force that a free magnetic north pole would experience at that point
- The field lines are stronger the closer the lines are together
- The field lines are weaker the further apart the lines are
- Magnetic field lines never cross
Magnetic Field Between Two Bar Magnets
- When two bar magnets are pushed together, they either attract or repel each other:
- Two like poles (north and north or south and south) repel each other
- Two opposite poles (north and south) attract each other
Two opposite poles attract each other and two like poles repel each other
Uniform Magnetic Fields
- In a uniform magnetic field, the strength of the magnetic field is the same at all points
- This is represented by equally spaced parallel lines, just like electric fields
A uniform magnetic field has equally spaced field lines and is created when two opposite poles are held close together
The Earth's Magnetic Field
- On Earth, in the absence of any magnet or magnetic materials, a magnetic compass will always point north
- This is because the north pole of the compass is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south pole (which is the geographic north pole)
The Earth's magnetic field acts in a similar way to a bar magnet. A compass points to the Earth's magnetic south pole which is the geographic north pole