Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDarlene Augusta Stevens Modified over 9 years ago
1
MAGNETISM
2
Magnetism Magnet – a material that has polarity – two opposite ends; the N-pole and the S-pole Example: the Earth- a giant magnet (south pole of the earth’s magnetic field is actually somewhere near true north) Think of how a compass points!
3
Magnetism Microscopic Picture of Magnets… The electrons moving within the individual atoms of the material create a tiny magnetic field When neighboring atom’s fields line up, they create DOMAINS- these are extremely small A magnet is formed when all of the domains in a material line up
4
Temporary Magnets Some metals can be polarized when brought close to naturally occurring magnets Ferromagnetic Materials – IRON, NICKEL, COBALT- the domains line up in the presence of the external magnetic field. They are temporary because the materials lose polarity when separated from the magnetic field.
5
Permanent Magnets Because of the microscopic structure of certain materials, polarization becomes permanent. ALNICO } iron alloy (Al 8%, Ni 14%, Co 3%) Most permanent magnets are made up of these materials Rare Earth elements: Neodymium, Gadolinium If you break a magnet into smaller pieces, the pieces will be smaller magnets. You cannot create a monopole.
6
Magnetic Fields Around Magnets Magnetic Field – field around a magnet in which a force is felt. Either attraction or repulsion This force is felt even at distances. Direction of the Field is determined by the direction that a N-pole of a compass points when placed in the field Fields can be visualized by the use of iron filings- each filing becomes a tiny magnet that lines up tangent to the field at a certain point.
7
Magnetic Fields Around Magnets
9
Strength of Magnetic Fields Magnetic Flux – the number of magnetic field lines passing through a surface Flux Density – the flux per unit area ~ proportional to the strength of the field Symbol: β ~ the flux is most concentrated at the poles the # of field lines = flux the # of field lines per unit area = FLUX DENSITY or MAGNETIC FIELD STRENGTH
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.