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MAGNETISM
Ancient
Greeks wrote about a type of peculiar rock that attracted
iron. People also noticed that when a sliver of lodestone
was suspended or floated, it always turned to one position
- a north-south direction. In addition, one end of
this sliver of lodestone always points toward geographic
North and the other to the South. This became an excellent
method for determining direction - a compass. The end
of the compass that points to geographic North was
called the north magnetic pole of the compass. The
magnetic compass was brought to Europe in the Middle
Ages from the Chinese who had been using the compass
for over 1500 years.
The image below shows a Chinese compass
from approximately 300-200 B.C.E. The spoon shape was
made from lodestone and could spin on the smooth plate
beneath it, pointing south. Our long and rich history
with magnetism is the result of a combination of conditions.
One is that iron is a common element in Earth's structure
from core to crust. Iron has an arrangement of electrons
that makes it possible to develop and maintain magnetism.
Iron found in the crust as magnetite can be magnetic.
It is also a peculiarity of the Earth that it is magnetic.
The ability to use a magnet as a compass made exploration
easier and magnetism more important.

Magnetism is one of a few fundamental
phenomena in the universe. Most of us have experienced
the strange effects of magnets. As we move a magnet
slowly toward a metal surface the attraction between
the magnet and the metal can suddenly become very great.
With a very strong magnet, the magnet and the metal
may leap toward each other and be very difficult to
separate. But the strangest effect is felt when two
magnets are moved close together. Sometimes we feel
the attraction, and sometimes there is an even stranger
repulsion. When two ends of the magnets repel each
other, it almost feels as if there is something between
the magnets, pushing them apart. If we slowly move
the repelling ends together, that mysterious repulsion
gets stronger and can even push the magnets sideways
rather than allow the magnets to touch. There is a
force on the magnets, even though their surfaces never
touch. This was called "action at a distance" in
the 1600s and was a very unsettling to many physicists
including Newton.
If you place a bar magnet under a sheet
of glass or clear plastic and sprinkle iron filings
on top of the glass, a very beautiful pattern appears.
The picture below shows just such an arrangement.
The
iron filings seem to follow certain lines in arcs from
one end of the magnet to the other. Scientists began
to recognize that there is a region of influence (a field)
in the space around a magnet. This invisible field
is responsible for the "action at a distance".
The field is stronger near the magnet and weaker farther
away. The field can be 'felt' or 'seen' when we push
magnets together or sprinkle iron filings around the
magnet. The POETRY web
site has activities for "seeing" magnetic
fields in "Exploring the Earth's Magnetic Field",
Activities I and II.
Scientists began to draw this invisible
field as lines around a magnet as in the drawing below.
Scientists have agreed to an arbitrary convention that
the field lines point from the north magnetic pole
to the south magnetic pole. The field is strongest
where the field lines are drawn closely together. The
needle of a compass placed near this bar magnet would
rotate until its north end pointed in the direction
of the local magnetic field line and tangent to the
line.
When two magnets are arranged end-to-end
with opposite poles adjacent as shown below, the field
lines between the magnets go from the north end of
the bottom magnet to the south end of the top magnet.
Close to the top magnet, field lines emerge from the
north end and connect with the south end. The same
is true close to the bottom magnet. However, at a distance,
the field from the north of the top magnet connects
to the south end of the bottom magnet. It is as if
there was only one magnet.
This type of connection does not occur
when two magnets are arranged end-to-end with opposing
poles adjacent (in the case shown below two north poles
are adjacent). Between the ends the magnetic fields
oppose each other and are forced sharply to the side.
To the side of each magnet the field lines curve from
north to south, however, the field lines are pushed
away from the opposing field becoming flatter near
the opposing magnet and bulging away on the far side.
The below models assume a permanent magnet
such as a bar magnet. Bar magnets are examples of ferromagnets.
The name comes from iron (ferric), the most common
element to display this behavior, yet nickel, cobalt,
chromium and a few other elements are also ferromagnetic.
While any atom with an unpaired electron can have a
magnetic field, the atoms of these special elements
act together in groups called domains, locking together
their magnetic poles. Each domain, ranging in size
from 0.1 mm to 1.0 mm, is a tiny magnet. When an external
magnetic field is applied under the right conditions,
all of these domains are induced to line up creating
a large magnet. In addition, ferromagnets tend to stay
magnetized long after the external field is removed.

(Photo Above: Courtesy of C R Nave HyperPhysics)
The next section, Electricity,
contains important background information to concepts intimately involved
in magnetism.
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