Mediocrates
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So are there photons "flowing" from one end of a permanent magnet to the other? If so what determines the frequency?
The exchange effect is an additional effect necessary to explain ferromagnetism, but the magnetic surface currents can be quantified with what I believe are highly accurate results. For a simple calculation, see the following post: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/magnetic-field-of-a-ferromagnetic-cylinder.863066/ Hopefully this doesn't start to lead too far off topic before the OP gets a chance to respond. ## \\ ## Also, Griffith's Electrodynamics book contains a very good derivation of the surface currents as he computes the vector potential ## \vec{A} ## from an arbitrary distribution of magnetization ## \vec{M} ##. I believe this result is in section 6.2 of his book.rumborak said:@Charles Link , that is an engineering approximation that hardly elucidates the actual generation of the magnetic field in a permanent magnet.
Charles ... you are making this far more complex than what a B level topic should beCharles Link said:The exchange effect is an additional effect necessary to explain ferromagnetism, but the magnetic surface currents can be quantified with what I believe are highly accurate results. For a simple calculation, see the following post: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/magnetic-field-of-a-ferromagnetic-cylinder.863066/ Hopefully this doesn't start to lead too far off topic before the OP gets a chance to respond. ## \\ ## Also, Griffith's Electrodynamics book contains a very good derivation of the surface currents as he computes the vector potential ## \vec{A} ## from an arbitrary distribution of magnetization ## \vec{M} ##. I believe this result is in section 6.2 of his book.
How would one determine the existence of a field in the absence of particles?weirdoguy said:Nothing. Field is a field, entity that lives on it's own. Photons are "excitations" (whatever that means) of quantum electromagnetic field, but that doesn't justify the claim that em field is composed of anything.
Quess my question was, "can there be a field without a particle?" I thought particles give rise to fields?rumborak said:That's probably more of a philosophical question since that scenario wouldn't be our universe.
Mediocrates said:I thought particles give rise to fields?