Lesson: Chapter - 15
Permanent Magnets
Like all other materials, permanent magnets are made up of atoms that have
electrons orbiting a nucleus of protons and neutrons. In moving around the
nucleus, these electrons create miniscule magnetic fields. In most materials,
these tiny fields all point in different random directions, so the bulk material
does not have a magnetic field. But in permanent magnets, the fields are all
lined up together, and so the material is magnetized.
Materials, like
iron, that can be magnetized, are called ferromagnetic. There are two
other types of magnetic materials: If a nonferromagnetic material is attracted
by a magnet, it is called paramagnetic. The atoms in an paramagnet line
up in the direction of an external field. If a nonferromagnetic material is
repelled by a magnet, it is called diamagnetic. The atoms in a diamagnet
line up against an external field.
Magnetic Field Lines
Permanent magnets—and electromagnets—have positive and negative poles, often
called “north” and “south,” respectively. Like electric field lines, magnetic
field lines go from the positive, or north, pole, toward the negative, or south,
pole. For example, the magnetic field of a bar magnet looks like this:
A horseshoe-shaped magnet creates a magnetic field like this:
It is possible to do a nifty experiment to see these magnetic field lines by
scattering iron fillings around a permanent magnet—the filings will move to
trace the lines.
The Earth’s Magnetic Field
The Earth itself acts like a huge bar magnet. The presence of a magnetic field
about the Earth allows us to use compasses that point northward, and creates a
spectacular aurora over the northern and southern skies. But the magnetism of
the Earth is quite complicated, and is still an active subject of research for
geologists, so let us turn to the simpler cases of idealized charges and
constant magnetic fields.
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