Bank$
Member
Can someone please tell me the EXACT differance between electric and magnetic feilds ??? I have asked so many ppl and they cnt seem to explain it properly
thanks,
thanks,
Electric field strength at a point is the electric force (N) per unit charge (C) at that point.Bank$ said:Can someone please tell me the EXACT differance between electric and magnetic feilds ??? I have asked so many ppl and they cnt seem to explain it properly
thanks,
so is it an electric feild that makes a magnet attrack stuff when still e.g putting a iron object next to a magnet and leting it go and observeing movement of the iron object.xiao1985 said:magnetic field excert a force on a moving charged stuff
if i move soming towards a magnets north pole(in a straight line) it experiences a force but i cnt c how it is travelling perpendicular to the feild lines, pls explainxiao1985 said:provides that it it cuts the flux of the magnetic field... ie, charged stuff move perpendicular to the flux direction)
What u said is very true as this is the same mistake that i commonly make, i manage to kill the multiple choice but do horrible with long response.xiao1985 said:be weary writing the answer down in an exam... uncalled for truth may hurt..... alot in your mark
What u said is very true as this is the same mistake that i commonly make. I manage to kill the multiple choice but do horrible with long response.xiao1985 said:be weary writing the answer down in an exam... uncalled for truth may hurt..... alot in your mark
Then why copper and many other metals and non-metals are not attracted by magnets.xiao1985 said:as a fellow science student, i'd encourage you finding the whole truths out... though be weary writing the answer down in an exam... uncalled for truth may hurt..... alot in your mark
as for why a magnet attract metals, metals comprises of unpaired electrons (due to their spins, little magnetic fields as well... however they are aligned randomly, otherwise they'd be a magnet as well) ... when a magnetic approaches (say north pole), the north pole will influence the little unpaired electrons, and forces it to spin in such a way that, the magnetic field it generates has south pole pointing towards the north pole (since it's an attractive force)... and now, you have temporarily created a "magnetic" where the south poles align to make a bigger south pole facing the north pole... and of course, south north attracts, hence magnet attracts metal...