Definition and Basic Principles
Magnetic Force Concept
Magnetic force: interaction between moving electric charges or magnetic dipoles and magnetic fields. Non-contact force. Arises from electromagnetic field dynamics.
Origin of Magnetic Force
Generated by moving charges (currents) or intrinsic magnetic moments of particles. Described by Maxwell's equations and quantum mechanics.
Fundamental Nature
One component of electromagnetic force; relativistic effect of electric force. Acts perpendicular to velocity of charged particles and magnetic field lines.
Lorentz Force
Definition
Force on charged particle in electromagnetic field. Vector sum of electric and magnetic forces.
Mathematical Expression
F = q(E + v × B)
Significance
Central to electromagnetism, particle accelerators, plasma physics, and electric motors.
Magnetic Fields
Magnetic Field Vector (B)
Represents magnetic influence at point in space. Units: tesla (T) or gauss (G), 1 T = 10,000 G.
Sources of Magnetic Fields
Electric currents, moving charges, changing electric fields, intrinsic magnetic moments.
Field Lines and Direction
Field lines: continuous, form closed loops from north to south poles. Direction defined by compass needle orientation.
Force on Moving Charges
Velocity Dependence
Force magnitude proportional to charge q, velocity v, and magnetic field B. Zero if velocity is parallel to B.
Perpendicular Nature
Force direction perpendicular to both velocity and magnetic field vectors.
Effect on Particle Trajectory
Charged particles undergo circular or helical motion under uniform B field; radius and pitch depend on velocity and field strength.
Force on Current-Carrying Conductors
Mechanism
Conductor with current I in magnetic field experiences force due to Lorentz force on moving electrons.
Force Expression
F = I (L × B), where L is length vector of conductor segment.
Applications
Electric motors, magnetic actuators, galvanometers, loudspeakers rely on this principle.
Magnetic Force Formulae
Force on a Moving Charge
F = q(v × B)Force on a Current-Carrying Wire
F = I (L × B)Force on a Loop
Net force depends on geometry, current distribution, and magnetic field gradients.
| Quantity | Formula | Units |
|---|---|---|
| Force on charge | F = q(v × B) | Newtons (N) |
| Force on wire | F = I(L × B) | Newtons (N) |
Direction of Magnetic Force
Right-Hand Rule
Thumb: velocity or current direction. Fingers: magnetic field direction. Palm: force direction on positive charge or current.
Sign Dependence
Negative charges experience force opposite to palm direction. Reversing charge reverses force direction.
Vector Cross Product
Force vector is cross product of velocity/current vector and magnetic field vector.
Applications of Magnetic Force
Electric Motors
Conversion of electrical energy to mechanical motion via magnetic forces on current loops.
Particle Accelerators
Magnetic force steers and focuses charged particle beams along curved trajectories.
Magnetic Levitation
Force balances gravitational forces enabling frictionless motion in maglev trains.
Magnetic Separation
Magnetic forces used to separate materials based on magnetic properties.
Magnetic Force in Materials
Magnetic Domains
Regions with uniform magnetic moment alignment; magnetic force affects domain walls and material magnetization.
Paramagnetism and Diamagnetism
Weak magnetic forces arise due to alignment or opposition of atomic magnetic moments with external fields.
Ferromagnetism
Strong magnetic forces due to spontaneous alignment of magnetic moments; basis of permanent magnets.
Measurement Techniques
Force Sensors
Devices measure magnetic force using strain gauges, piezoelectric sensors, or torsion balances.
Hall Effect Sensors
Measure magnetic field strength indirectly by detecting voltage induced perpendicular to current and field.
Magnetic Torque Measurements
Used to determine magnetic moments and forces by analyzing torque on samples in magnetic fields.
Experimental Demonstrations
Charged Particle Deflection
Electron beams deflected by magnetic fields visualize force effect; used in cathode ray tubes.
Force on Current-Carrying Wire
Wire suspended in magnetic field moves under current flow, demonstrating magnetic force.
Magnetic Levitation Experiments
Superconductors or magnets levitate above magnetic tracks, illustrating magnetic force balance.
Limitations and Boundaries
Non-Applicability to Stationary Charges
Magnetic force zero for charges at rest relative to magnetic field.
Force Magnitude Limits
Limited by maximum achievable magnetic fields and charge velocity.
Quantum and Relativistic Effects
At atomic scales or near light speed, classical magnetic force descriptions require quantum electrodynamics corrections.
References
- J.D. Jackson, "Classical Electrodynamics," 3rd ed., Wiley, 1998, pp. 150-200.
- D.J. Griffiths, "Introduction to Electrodynamics," 4th ed., Pearson, 2013, pp. 300-350.
- R.P. Feynman, R.B. Leighton, M. Sands, "The Feynman Lectures on Physics," Vol. 2, Addison-Wesley, 1964, pp. 15-50.
- M. Alonso, E.J. Finn, "Fundamental University Physics," Vol. 2, Addison-Wesley, 1967, pp. 220-260.
- J. Purcell, "Electricity and Magnetism," 2nd ed., McGraw-Hill, 1985, pp. 180-215.