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Sriaansh Kapoor
XII-A
Sriaansh Kapoor | Class XII-A | Physics ISC: 2017-18
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Signature of Principal
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Sriaansh Kapoor | Class XII-A | Physics ISC: 2017-18
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Sriaansh Kapoor | Class XII-A | Physics ISC: 2017-18
HISTORY
Magnetism was first discovered in the ancient world, when people noticed that lodestones,
naturally magnetized pieces of the mineral magnetite, could attract iron. The word magnet
comes from the Greek term for lodestone, "magntis lthos", which means a stone from the
region of Magnesia. In ancient Greece, Aristotle attributed the first of what could be called a
scientific discussion of magnetism to the philosopher Thales of Miletus, who lived from
about 625 BC to about 545 BC. Around the same time, in ancient India, the Indian surgeon
Sushruta was the first to make use of the magnet for surgical purposes.
In ancient China, the earliest literary reference to magnetism lies in a 4th-century BC book
named after its author, The Master of Demon Valley. The 2nd-century BC annals, Lshi
Chunqiu, also notes: "The lodestone makes iron approach, or it attracts it." The earliest
mention of the attraction of a needle is in a 1st-century work Lunheng (Balanced Inquiries):
"A lodestone attracts a needle." The 11th-century Chinese scientist Shen Kuo was the first
person to write in the Dream Pool Essays of the magnetic needle compass and that it
improved the accuracy of navigation by employing the astronomical concept of true north.
By the 12th century the Chinese were known to use the lodestone compass for navigation.
They sculpted a directional spoon from lodestone in such a way that the handle of the spoon
always pointed south.
Alexander Neckam, by 1187, was the first in Europe to describe the compass and its use for
navigation. In 1269, Peter Peregrinus de Maricourt wrote the Epistola de magnete, the first
extant treatise describing the properties of magnets. In 1282, the properties of magnets and
the dry compass were discussed by Al-Ashraf, a Yemeni physicist, astronomer, and
geographer.
An understanding of the relationship between electricity and magnetism began in 1819 with
work by Hans Christian rsted, a professor at the University of Copenhagen, who
discovered by the accidental twitching of a compass needle near a wire that an electric
current could create a magnetic field. This landmark experiment is known as rsted's
Experiment. Several other experiments followed, with Andr-Marie Ampre, who in 1820
discovered that the magnetic field circulating in a closed-path was related to the current
flowing through the perimeter of the path; Carl Friedrich Gauss; Jean-Baptiste Biot and Flix
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Savart, both of whom in 1820 came up with the BiotSavart law giving an equation for the
magnetic field from a current-carrying wire; Michael Faraday, who in 1831 found that a time-
varying magnetic flux through a loop of wire induced a voltage, and others finding further
links between magnetism and electricity. James Clerk Maxwell synthesized and expanded
these insights into Maxwell's equations, unifying electricity, magnetism, and optics into the
field of electromagnetism. In 1905, Einstein used these laws in motivating his theory of
special relativity, requiring that the laws held true in all inertial reference frames.
Source of Magnetism
1. Electric current.
2. Spin magnetic moments of elementary particles. The magnetic moments of the nuclei
of atoms are typically thousands of times smaller than the electrons' magnetic
moments, so they are negligible in the context of the magnetization of materials.
Nuclear magnetic moments are nevertheless very important in other contexts,
particularly in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI).
Ordinarily, the enormous number of electrons in a material are arranged such that their
magnetic moments (both orbital and intrinsic) cancel out. This is due, to some extent, to
electrons combining into pairs with opposite intrinsic magnetic moments as a result of the
Pauli exclusion principle (see electron configuration), or combining into filled subshells
with zero net orbital motion. In both cases, the electron arrangement is so as to exactly
cancel the magnetic moments from each electron. Moreover, even when the electron
configuration is such that there are unpaired electrons and/or non-filled subshells, it is
often the case that the various electrons in the solid will contribute magnetic moments that
point in different, random directions, so that the material will not be magnetic.
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MATERIALS
Diamagnetism
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field (in accordance with Lenz's law). This results in a small bulk magnetic moment, with an
opposite direction to the applied field.
Paramagnetism
In a paramagnetic material there are unpaired electrons, i.e. atomic or molecular orbitals
with exactly one electron in them. While paired electrons are required by the Paulis
Exclusion Principle to have their intrinsic ('spin') magnetic moments pointing in opposite
directions, causing their magnetic fields to cancel out, an unpaired electron is free to align
its magnetic moment in any direction. When an external magnetic field is applied, these
magnetic moments will tend to align themselves in the same direction as the applied field,
thus reinforcing it.
Ferromagnetism
Magnetic Domains
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Anti-Ferromagnetism
In an anti-Ferromagnet, unlike a
Ferromagnet, there is a tendency
for the intrinsic magnetic
moments of neighboring valence
electrons to point in opposite
directions. When all atoms are
arranged in a substance so that
each neighbor is 'anti-aligned',
the substance is
antiferromagnetic. Anti-
Ferromagnets have a zero net
magnetic moment, meaning no field is produced by them. Anti-Ferromagnets are less
common compared to the other types of behaviors, and are mostly observed at low
temperatures. In varying temperatures, anti-Ferromagnets can be seen to exhibit
diamagnetic and ferromagnetic properties.
In some materials, neighboring electrons want to point in opposite directions, but there is
no geometrical arrangement in which each pair of neighbors is anti-aligned. This is called a
spin glass, and is an example of geometrical frustration.
Ferrimagnetism
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Super-Magnetism
When a Ferromagnet or ferrimagnet is sufficiently small, it acts like a single magnetic spin
that is subject to Brownian motion. Its response to a magnetic field is qualitatively similar
to the response of a paramagnet, but much larger.
Other Types of Magnetism
Meta-Magnetism
Molecule-based Magnet
Spin Glass
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ELECTROMAGNET
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When electric current is carried in a wire, a magnetic field is formed around it. The
magnetic field lines form concentric circles around the wire. The magnetic field direction
depends on the direction of the current. It can be determined using the "right hand rule", by
pointing the thumb of your right hand in the direction of the current. The direction of the
magnetic field lines is the direction of your curled fingers. The magnitude of the magnetic
field depends on the amount of current, and the distance from the charge-carrying wire. The
formula includes the constant . This is called the permeability of free space, and has a
value . The unit of magnetic field is the Tesla, T.
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MAGNETIC FIELD
A magnetic field is the magnetic effect of electric currents and magnetic materials. The
magnetic field at any given point is specified by both a direction and a magnitude (or
strength); as such it is represented by a vector field. The term is used for two distinct but
closely related fields denoted by the symbols B and H, where H is measured in units
of amperes per meter (symbol: Am1 or A/m) in the SI. B is measured in tesla (symbol: T)
and newton per meter per ampere (symbol: Nm1A1 or N/
(mA)) in the SI. B is most commonly defined in terms of
the Lorentz force it exerts on moving electric charges.
Magnetic fields can be produced by moving electric
charges and the intrinsic magnetic moments of elementary
particles associated with a fundamental quantum property,
their spin. In special relativity, electric and magnetic fields
are two interrelated aspects of a single object, called
the electromagnetic tensor; the split of this tensor into
electric and magnetic fields depends on the relative velocity
of the observer and charge. In quantum physics, the electromagnetic field is quantized and
electromagnetic interactions result from the exchange of photons.
In everyday life, magnetic fields are most often encountered as a force created
by permanent magnets, which pull on ferromagnetic materials such as iron, cobalt, or
nickel, and attract or repel other magnets. Magnetic fields are widely used throughout
modern technology, particularly in electrical engineering and electro mechanics. The Earth
produces its own magnetic field, which is important in navigation, and it shields the Earth's
atmosphere from solar wind. Rotating magnetic fields are used in both electric
motors and generators. Magnetic forces give information about the charge carriers in a
material through the Hall Effect. The interaction of magnetic fields in electric devices such
as transformers is studied in the discipline of magnetic circuits.
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and denotes the cross product. The vector B is termed the magnetic field, and it
is defined as the vector field necessary to make the Lorentz force law correctly
describe the motion of a charged particle. This definition allows the determination
of B in the following way. 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 resultsthat is the magnetic
field at the place in question. Alternatively, the magnetic field can be defined in terms
of the torque it produces on a magnetic dipole.
The H-Field-In addition to B, there is a quantity H, which is also sometimes called
the magnetic field. In a vacuum, B and H are proportional to each other, with the
multiplicative constant depending on the physical units. Inside a material they are
different. The term "magnetic field" is historically reserved for H while using other
terms for B. Informally, though, and formally for some recent textbooks mostly in
physics, the term 'magnetic field' is used to describe B as well as or in place
of H. There are many alternative names for both.
Units
In SI units, B is measured in tesla (symbol: T) and correspondingly B (magnetic flux) is
measured in weber (symbol: Wb) so that a flux density of 1 Wb/m2 is 1 tesla. The SI unit of
tesla is equivalent to (newtonsecond)/ (coulombmetre). In Gaussian-cgs units, B is
measured in gauss (symbol: G). (The conversion is 1 T = 10,000 G.) One nano-tesla is also
called a gamma (symbol: ). The H-field is measured in amperes per metre (A/m) in SI units,
and in oersteds (Oe) in cgs units.
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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.
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After rsted discovered that electric currents produce a magnetic field and Ampere
discovered that electric currents attracted and repelled each other similar to magnets, it
was natural to hypothesize that all magnetic fields are due to electric current loops. In this
model developed by Ampere, the elementary magnetic dipole that makes up all magnets is a
sufficiently small Amperian loop of current I. The dipole moment of this loop
is m = IA where A is the area of the loop.
These magnetic dipoles produce a magnetic B-field. 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 either extends to infinity or
wraps around to form a closed curve. To date no exception to this
rule has been found. (See magnetic monopole below.) 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. If a B-field line
enters a magnet somewhere it has to leave somewhere else; it is
not allowed to have an end point. Magnetic poles, therefore, always come in N and S pairs.
More formally, since all the magnetic field lines that enter any given region must also leave
that region, subtracting the 'number' of field lines that enter the region from the number
that exit gives identically zero. Mathematically this is equivalent to: 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.
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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: 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. To understand this equation, note
that the dot product m B = mBcos (), where m and B represent the magnitude of
the m and B vectors and 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.
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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 tends to align a
magnet's poles with the magnetic field lines. A
compass, therefore, turns to align itself with Earth's
magnetic field.
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.
As is the case for the force between magnets, the magnetic pole model leads more readily to
the correct equation. Here, 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 = 0mHsin, where 0 is a constant called the vacuum
permeability, measuring 4107 Vs/(Am) and is the angle between H and m.
The Amperian loop model also predicts the same magnetic torque. Here, it is the B field
interacting with the Amperian current loop through a Lorentz force described below. Again,
the results are the same although the models are completely different.
Mathematically, the torque on a small magnet is proportional both to the applied
magnetic field and to the magnetic moment m of the magnet:
= m x B = 0m x H
where represents the vector cross product. Note that 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. (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.
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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.
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.)
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 Biot-Savart Law relates magnetic fields to the currents which are their sources. In a
similar manner, Coulomb's law relates electric fields to the point charges which are their
sources. Finding the magnetic field resulting from a current distribution involves the vector
product, and is inherently a calculus problem when the distance from the current to the
field point is continuously changing.
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F = qE + qV x 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 tesla).
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. 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 because the work in those cases is performed by the electric
forces of the charges deflected by the magnetic field.
F = qvBsin
Direction of Force
The direction of force on a charge or a current can be determined by a mnemonic known as
the right-hand rule. Using the right hand and pointing the thumb in the direction of the
moving positive charge or positive current and the fingers in the direction of the magnetic
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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:
M.dl = Ib
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 0M.dA = -qM
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 = (B/0)-M
In terms of the H-field, Ampere's law is:
(H1 + H2) = Kf x
points in the direction
where Kf is the surface free current density and the unit normal
from medium 2 to medium 1. 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:
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H = H0 + Hd
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.
. . .
u= = =
If there are no magnetic materials around then can be replaced by 0. 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 W needed to cause a small
change of magnetic field B is:
W = H. 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.
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The presence of this field causes a compass, placed anywhere within it, to rotate so that the
"north pole" of the magnet in the compass points roughly north, toward Earth's North
Magnetic Pole. This is the traditional definition of the "north pole" of a magnet, although
other equivalent definitions are also possible.
One confusion that arises from this definition is that, if Earth itself is considered as a
magnet, the south pole of that magnet would be the one nearer the north magnetic pole,
and vice versa. The north magnetic pole is so-named not because of the polarity of the field
there but because of its geographical location. The north and south poles of a permanent
magnet are so-called because they are "north-seeking" and "south-seeking", respectively.
The figure is a sketch of Earth's magnetic field represented by field lines. For most locations,
the magnetic field has a significant up/down component in addition to the north/south
component. (There is also an east/west component, as Earth's magnetic and geographical
poles do not coincide.) The magnetic field can be visualised as a bar magnet buried deep in
Earth's interior.
Earth's magnetic field is not constantthe strength of the field and the location of its poles
vary. Moreover, the poles periodically reverse their orientation in a process
called geomagnetic reversal. The most recent reversal occurred 780,000 years ago.
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MAGNETIC DIPOLES
A very common source of magnetic field found in nature is a dipole, with a "South pole" and
a "North pole", terms dating back to the use of magnets as
compasses, interacting with the Earth's magnetic field to indicate
North and South on the globe. Since opposite ends of magnets are
attracted, the north pole of a magnet is attracted to the south pole
of another magnet. The Earth's North Magnetic Pole (currently in
the Arctic Ocean, north of Canada) is physically a south pole, as it
attracts the north pole of a compass. A magnetic field
contains energy, and physical systems move toward configurations
with lower energy. When diamagnetic material is placed in a magnetic field, a magnetic
dipole tends to align itself in opposed polarity to that field, thereby lowering the net field
strength. When ferromagnetic material is placed within a magnetic field, the magnetic
dipoles align to the applied field, thus expanding the domain walls of the magnetic
domains.
Magnetic Monopoles-Since a bar magnet gets its ferromagnetism from electrons
distributed evenly throughout the bar, when a bar magnet is cut in half, each of the
resulting pieces is a smaller bar magnet. Even though a magnet is said to have a north pole
and a south pole, these two poles cannot be separated from each other. A monopoleif
such a thing existswould be a new and fundamentally different kind of magnetic object. It
would act as an isolated north pole, not attached to a south pole, or vice versa. Monopoles
would carry "magnetic charge" analogous to electric charge. Despite systematic searches
since 1931, as of 2010, they have never been observed, and could very well not exist.
Nevertheless, some theoretical physics models predict the existence of these magnetic
monopoles. Paul Dirac observed in 1931 that, because electricity and magnetism show a
certain symmetry, just as quantum theory predicts that
individual positive or negative electric charges can be observed without the opposing
charge, isolated South or North magnetic poles should be observable. Using quantum
theory Dirac showed that if magnetic monopoles exist, then one could explain the
quantization of electric chargethat is, why the observed elementary particles carry
charges that are multiples of the charge of the electron.
Certain grand unified theories predict the existence of monopoles which, unlike elementary
particles, are solitons (localized energy packets). The initial results of using these models to
estimate the number of monopoles created in the big bang contradicted cosmological
observationsthe monopoles would have been so plentiful and massive that they would
have long since halted the expansion of the universe. However, the idea of inflation (for
which this problem served as a partial motivation) was successful in solving this problem,
creating models in which monopoles existed but were rare enough to be consistent with
current observations.
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UNITS
Others
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