Title: Magnetism
1Magnetism
- Physics
- La Cañada High School
- Dr.E
2Magnetism1
- Magnetism is a force that attracts certain metals
- Magnets have two poles that act both similarly
and differently than electrical charges act - Easy to detect magnetism, although it is not easy
to measure its strength - Make a magnet by rubbing steel against another
magnet
3Properties of Magnetism
- Magnetism is a force that attracts iron, nickel
and cobalt - Combinations of these metals as alloys can become
permanent sources of magnetism - A lodestone is the naturally occurring magnetite
that has the chemical formula Fe3O4
4Magnetism is Safe
- Electrical charges can give a person a shock or
even kill the person - Magnetism doesn't seem to have any harmful
effects - People who claim that magnets are even beneficial
to your health
5Magnets Attract Iron
- A magnet
- an object made of a material that attracts iron,
nickel and cobalt, as well as alloys of these
metals - both attracts and repels other magnets.
- Magnetic force attracts and repels acts at a
distance - A few rare-earth materials such as bismuth are
actually repelled by a magnet
6Magnet has Two Poles
- Opposite ends of a magnet are called its north
and south poles - should be called the "north seeking" and "south
seeking" poles, because they seek the Earth's
North Pole and South Pole, respectively - Like poles repel
- north pole of magnet will push the north pole of
another magnet
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8Magnetic Field Nature
- Magnetism originates in the motion of the
electrons - Spinning electrons act like tiny magnets
- Cancellation of this effect occurs in most
materials - Iron, nickel, cobalt are exceptions
9Magnet Electrical Difference
- Every magnet has a north pole and a south pole
- A magnet always has a N and S pole
- If you cut a magnet in half, each piece will
still have a N and S pole
10Magnetic Domains
- The magnetic north-south axes of groups of iron
atoms line up in the same direction - Magnetic domains
- Domains are randomly oriented unmagnetized iron
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12Magnetization
- An external magnetic field will twist the domains
into alignment - Domains are randomly oriented in unmagnetized
iron - Incomplete alignment of domains in slightly
magnetized iron - Virtually all of the domains are aligned in
strongly magnetized iron
13Detecting Magnetic Field
- Iron filings on a piece of paper
- Spread fine iron filings on a piece of paper laid
on top of a magnet - Outline of the magnetic lines of force or the
magnetic field
14Detecting Magnetic Field
- Compass
- Thin magnet or magnetized iron needle balanced on
a pivot - needle will rotate to point toward the opposite
pole of a magnet - One end marked N and the other S
15A Compass ?Magnetic Field
16Measuring Magnetic Strength
- Not easy to measure the strength of a magnetic
field - Gauss meter is used to measure a magnetic field
- meters uncommon due to limited use
17Electric Currents and Magnetic Field
- Spinning or rotating electrons are responsible
for magnetism in iron - Moving charges set up magnetic fields
- Compasses (bar magnets) line up in circles around
a wire carrying current.
18Iron Filings form Concentric Circles around Wire
19Electric Currents and Magnetic Field3
- Magnetic field lines around a long wire which
carries an electric current form concentric
circles around the wire - The direction of the magnetic field is in the
direction the fingers if your right hand curls
around the wire with your thumb in the direction
of the current
20Electric Currents and Magnetic Field
21Magnetic Levitation
- Trains float above guide way due to magnetic
field - Travel at speeds of up to 300 mph (500 kph)
22Magnetic Levitation
Superman the Ride works due to magnetic
levitation
23Magnetic Forces on Moving Charged Particles
- If charge particles move in a magnetic field,
they experience a sideways force
24Magnetic Forces on Current Carrying Wires
- Moving electrons in wire are pushed up, or down,
depending on their direction
25Measuring Currents
- Coils of current-carrying wires set up magnetic
field perpendicular to plane of coil - Compass needle aligns itself with the field lines
26Current-Measuring Apparatus
- Electromagnet tends to align its north face with
the iron magnet's south face - A spring resists this tendency to twist the
greater the current, the greater the deflection
of the needle
27Earth as a Giant magnet
- Earth's magnetic field is thought to be generated
deep inside the planet - An inner core of solid iron is surrounded by an
outer core of molten iron - They rotate at different rates, and the
interaction between the regions creates what
scientists call a "hydromagnetic dynamo."
28Earths Magnetosphere Layer4
- Also named Van Allen Belts
- Protects the Earth from celestial bodies, harmful
cosmic rays and particles - Belts at thousands of kilometers above the earth
protect the living things on the Earth
- from the fatal energy
- that would otherwise
- reach it from space
29Earths Magnetic Field5
- The Earth has a magnetic field with north and
south poles - reaches 36,000 miles into space.
- surrounded in a region called the magnetosphere
- prevents most of the particles from the sun,
carried in solar wind, from hitting the Earth
30Aurora
- High Speed electrons and protons from space
travel along magnetic field lines - Field lines are nearly horizontal near the
equator which protects the atmosphere - The field lines are nearly vertical at high
latitude, thus the high speed particles can enter
the atmosphere
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33Magnetic Pole Location
- Location of magnetic pole is not fixed
- Geographic north is called the Earth's North
Magnetic Pole by convention - The North Magnetic Pole is actually the south
pole of the Earth's magnetic field - the north pole of a compass was defined as the
pole that points to the geomagnetic north
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35Earths Magnet Flips
- Magnetosphere can flip its orientation so that
the field lines which were pointed toward the
north pole change and point toward the south pole - record preserved in magnetic rocks which lie
along the ocean floor - Magnetism in these rocks points first in one
direction, then in another direction, giving the
ocean floor a stripped appearance (from a
magnetic point of view - many times in the past the north pole has become
the south pole, and vice versa
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37The Sun is a Great Big Magnet
38Suns Magnet Field
- The Sun is a big magnet
- During solar minimum the Sun's magnetic field
resembles that of an iron bar magnet, with great
closed loops near the equator and open field
lines near the poles - The Sun's dipolar field is about as strong as a
refrigerator magnet, or 50 gauss - Earth's magnetic field is 100 times weaker
39Sunspots
- Sunspots are places where intense magnetic loops
-- hundreds of times stronger than the ambient
dipole field -- poke through the photosphere - Sunspot magnetic fields overwhelm the underlying
dipole - The Sun's magnetic field isn't confined to the
immediate vicinity of our star - The solar wind carries it throughout the solar
system
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41Magnetic Fields on the Sun
- Plasma, like iron filings, follows magnetic field
lines - Coronal loops created by hot, glowing plasma flow
along magnetic field lines
The Earth fits inside the loop
42Cell Phones and Pagers
- When there are many sun spots, it is called the
solar maximum - lots of solar flares
- strong solar wind
- radiation is also extra strong
- All this solar activity can interfere with radio
waves - cell phones and pagers don't work all the time
- can hear solar static on car radio.
43Bibliography
- Magnetism information from School for Champions
Website by Ron Kurtus (revised 29 January 2002) _at_
http//www.school-for-champions.com/science/magnet
ism.htm, 4/15/04 - Magnetism Chapter 9 by Joseph F. Alward, PhD,
Department of Physics, University of the Pacific
_at_ http//sol.sci.uop.edu/jfalward/physics17/chapt
er9/chapter9.html, 4/15/04 - HyperPhysics by Carl R. (Rod) Nave Department of
Physics and Astronomy Georgia State University _at_
http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/magneti
c/magcur.html, 4/15/04 - Creation of the Universe The Quran and Life by
Harun Yahya _at_ http//www.creationofuniverse.com/
html/science_06.html , 4/15/04 - Earths Magnetic Field by Windows to the
Universe, Last modified June 3, 2003 _at_
http//www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link/earth/Magne
tosphere/overview.html , 4/16/04 - Windows to Universe by Windows to the Universe,
Last modified June 3, 2003 _at_ http//www.windows.uc
ar.edu/spaceweather/location_mag_poles.html,
4/16/04 - New clues to Earth's magnetic flip-flops by CNN
News, April 7, 2004 _at_http//www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/
space/04/07/poles.reverse/, 4/16/04