Definition and Basic Concept

Magnetic Dipole

Physical entity producing magnetic field similar to a tiny magnet with north and south poles. Idealized as a closed loop of electric current or intrinsic magnetic moment in particles.

Dipole Approximation

At distances much larger than the dipole size, magnetic field resembles that of a point magnetic dipole. Higher order multipoles neglected.

Sources

Arises from electron orbital motion, electron spin, and circulating currents. No isolated magnetic monopoles observed experimentally.

Magnetic Dipole Moment

Definition

Vector quantity representing strength and orientation of magnetic dipole. Denoted as m or μ.

Current Loop Model

Magnetic moment m = current (I) × area vector (A). Direction given by right-hand rule.

Units and Dimensions

SI units: amperes times square meters (A·m²). Dimensions: current × area.

m = I × A

Magnetic Field of a Dipole

Dipole Field Equation

Magnetic field B at position r due to dipole moment m:

B(r) = (μ₀/4πr³) [3(m·r̂)r̂ − m]

Field Characteristics

Field decreases as 1/r³ with distance. Symmetrical about dipole axis. Zero monopole term.

Visualization

Field lines emerge from north pole region, curve around, and enter south pole region, forming closed loops.

Torque and Potential Energy

Torque on Magnetic Dipole

Torque τ exerted by external magnetic field B on dipole m:

τ = m × B

Potential Energy

Potential energy U of dipole in magnetic field:

U = −m · B

Physical Interpretation

Dipole aligns to minimize potential energy. Torque tends to rotate dipole parallel to magnetic field.

Magnetic Dipoles in Materials

Atomic and Molecular Dipoles

Electron orbital and spin magnetic moments create atomic dipoles. Molecules may have net magnetic dipole moment.

Paramagnetism

Materials with unpaired electrons possess magnetic dipoles aligning weakly with external fields.

Ferromagnetism and Domains

Strong interaction aligns dipoles spontaneously forming domains. Leads to permanent magnetism.

Material TypeDipole AlignmentMagnetic Behavior
ParamagneticRandom, aligns weakly under fieldWeak attraction
FerromagneticStrongly aligned in domainsStrong permanent magnetism
DiamagneticInduced opposite to applied fieldWeak repulsion

Quantum Mechanical Perspective

Electron Spin and Magnetic Moment

Electron spin intrinsic angular momentum generates magnetic moment. Quantized values: ±½ ħ.

Landé g-Factor

Magnetic moment related to spin by g-factor (~2 for electron). Determines splitting in magnetic fields.

Zeeman Effect

Splitting of atomic energy levels in magnetic field due to dipole interaction with B field.

Dipole-Dipole Interactions

Interaction Energy

Energy between two magnetic dipoles m₁ and m₂ separated by r:

U = (μ₀/4πr³) [m₁ · m₂ − 3(m₁ · r̂)(m₂ · r̂)] 

Alignment and Coupling

Dipoles tend to align parallel or antiparallel depending on relative orientation to minimize energy.

Role in Magnetic Materials

Dipole interactions influence magnetic ordering, domain formation, and magnetic susceptibility.

Applications of Magnetic Dipoles

Magnetic Storage

Information encoded by orientation of magnetic dipoles in media like hard disks.

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Exploits nuclear magnetic dipoles to produce detailed body images via resonance in magnetic fields.

Compass and Navigation

Earth acts as giant magnetic dipole; compass needle aligns with geomagnetic field.

Electromagnets and Motors

Current loops generate magnetic dipoles; basis of electromechanical devices.

Measurement Techniques

Magnetometers

Devices measuring magnetic dipole moments via external magnetic field detection.

Torque Magnetometry

Measures torque on sample to determine magnetic moment and anisotropy.

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)

Detects nuclear magnetic dipoles’ response to radiofrequency and magnetic fields.

Mathematical Formulation

Vector Representation

Magnetic dipole moment m as vector quantity with magnitude and direction.

Magnetic Field in Cartesian Coordinates

Field components derived from dipole moment and position vector:

Bx = (μ₀/4πr⁵) [3x(m·r) − r² mx]By = (μ₀/4πr⁵) [3y(m·r) − r² my]Bz = (μ₀/4πr⁵) [3z(m·r) − r² mz] 

Multipole Expansion

Dipole term is first non-zero term in magnetic multipole expansion; higher order terms decrease faster with distance.

Comparison with Electric Dipole

Definition

Electric dipole: pair of opposite electric charges separated by distance. Magnetic dipole: circulating current or intrinsic moment.

Field Behavior

Both fields decrease as 1/r³. Magnetic field lines form closed loops; electric field lines begin/end on charges.

Physical Constraints

Electric monopoles exist (charges); magnetic monopoles not observed. Magnetic dipoles inherently current loops or spin.

Advanced Topics and Recent Research

Magnetic Monopoles Hypothesis

Theoretical particles with isolated magnetic charge. Experimental searches ongoing; none confirmed.

Spintronics

Technology exploiting electron spin magnetic dipoles for data storage and transfer beyond charge-based electronics.

Nanomagnetic Dipoles

Magnetic dipoles engineered at nanoscale for applications in sensors, quantum computing, and biomedicine.

References

  • Jackson, J. D. "Classical Electrodynamics." Wiley, 3rd Ed., 1998, pp. 165-180.
  • Griffiths, D. J. "Introduction to Electrodynamics." Pearson, 4th Ed., 2013, pp. 242-256.
  • Bozorth, R. M. "Ferromagnetism." IEEE Press, 1993, pp. 12-35.
  • Blundell, S. "Magnetism in Condensed Matter." Oxford University Press, 2001, pp. 50-70.
  • Feynman, R. P., Leighton, R. B., Sands, M. "The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Vol. II." Addison-Wesley, 1964, pp. 17-25.