Difference between revisions of "Magnet"

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m (Jnc moved page Permanent magnet to Magnet: Cover all of them)
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A '''permanent magnet''' is a block of material in which the spin of [[electron]]s in the atoms of the material have been lined up. Since moving electric charges can have an effect on the [[magnetic field]], the material becomes the source of a magnetic field. (Normally the spins of the electrons are random, and so they all cancel each other's field out.)
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A '''magnet''' is an assemblage upon which a [[magnetic field]] exerts a force. The are two kinds of magnets, '''permanent magnets''' and '''electromagnets'''.
  
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A permanent magnet is a block of material in which the spin of [[electron]]s in the atoms of the material have been lined up. (This can be done in a number of ways, e.g.by placing it in the magnetic field of an electromagnet.) Since moving electric charges can have an effect on the magnetic field, the material becomes the source of a magnetic field. (Normally the spins of the electrons are random, and so they all cancel each other's field out.)
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An electromagnet is an [[inductor]] through which a [[current]] is run. As long as the current is on, a magnet is formed.
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Revision as of 19:51, 10 October 2018

A magnet is an assemblage upon which a magnetic field exerts a force. The are two kinds of magnets, permanent magnets and electromagnets.

A permanent magnet is a block of material in which the spin of electrons in the atoms of the material have been lined up. (This can be done in a number of ways, e.g.by placing it in the magnetic field of an electromagnet.) Since moving electric charges can have an effect on the magnetic field, the material becomes the source of a magnetic field. (Normally the spins of the electrons are random, and so they all cancel each other's field out.)

An electromagnet is an inductor through which a current is run. As long as the current is on, a magnet is formed.