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Question about magnet |
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| Sep7-07, 10:40 AM | #1 |
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Question about magnet
Hi,
I am new to this forum, and I just wanna say hi and I am glad that I am here. Now, I have one animation. Isn't the magnet always staying stationary, in one position? Thank you very much. Best regards. |
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| Sep7-07, 11:46 AM | #2 |
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Mentor
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What magnet? The animation would appear to show a fixed something in the middle (a magnetic pole?), and a moving object that is orbiting around the fixed object, under the influence of a central attractive force.
That wouldn't work for magnets, BTW, because there are no magnetic "monopoles", only dipoles. So you can't have a North pole body and a South pole body that are isolated. Also, if those bodies were real (and attracted by something like gravity or electrostatic forces), the middle body would be moving some too -- the two bodies would orbit around their common center of mass. Welcome to the PF, BTW. |
| Sep7-07, 12:01 PM | #3 |
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| Sep7-07, 12:39 PM | #4 |
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Mentor
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Question about magnethttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnets |
| Sep7-07, 02:14 PM | #5 |
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| Sep7-07, 03:13 PM | #6 |
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The animation is depicting an electron "orbiting" a proton. njama has assigned the two particles with N and S. He is imagining an atom as essentially a spinning magnet and wants to know why macro-scale magnets have stationary poles.
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| Sep8-07, 12:41 AM | #7 |
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| Sep8-07, 06:24 AM | #8 |
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The whole problem, then, is that your animation, an electron orbiting a proton, has nothing to do with magnets!
It is even unrealistic in terms of charged particles (not magnets). An electron "orbiting" a proton would be accelerating and so radiating energy. Electrons do not "orbit" nuclei, they form "clouds" around them (even a single electron). |
| Sep8-07, 07:11 AM | #9 |
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| Sep8-07, 09:26 AM | #10 |
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| Sep8-07, 10:54 AM | #11 |
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| Sep8-07, 11:41 AM | #12 |
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"Even when there is no external magnetic field, in the inertial frame of the moving electron, the electromagnetic field of the nucleus has a magnetic component. The spin of the electron has an associated magnetic moment which interacts with this magnetic field. This effect is also explained by special relativity, and it leads to the so-called spin-orbit coupling, i.e., an interaction between the electron's orbital motion around the nucleus, and its spin. " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_atom |
| Sep8-07, 12:01 PM | #13 |
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| Sep8-07, 05:42 PM | #14 |
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Perhaps it would be a useful demonstration to describe the structure of the simplest possible magnet. How many atoms are required, and what is their relationship to each other such that they form a magnetic material with a north and south pole?
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| Sep9-07, 02:19 AM | #15 |
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| Sep10-07, 01:22 PM | #16 |
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So, is it possible that the electrons are standing (not moving)?
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| Sep10-07, 04:51 PM | #17 |
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A molecule can be a dipole. Water is a polar molecule. It has a definite shape (it is not spherical) and because of its molecular structure, the electrons tend to gather at one end (the oxygen atom tugs on them), leaving the other end (the hydrogens) positively charged. You now have a tiny magnet. When many molecules line up, you have a larger, more powerful magnet. |
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