goodname said:
Do magnetic field is produced in all the following 3 cases?
Case 1: An isolated electron moving linearly with constant velocity in space.
Case 2: An electron moving inside a copper conductor linearly(current).
case 3: A ball( made up of many molecules, in-turn atoms, in-turn electrons but firmly hold by parent atom in its orbit-insulator) moving linearly with constant velocity in ground.
Thanks for all your replies. My Mothertongue is not English. Let me reframe the question more clearly.
Charge is the property of an electron which is unique and constant in all position and all time. That is charge of the electron is same whether it is in a ball or in a copper conductor or in a vacuum as isolated unit.
Motion of any matter represents that the position of the matter changed in space over time.
For exmaple, an electron is said to have undergone motion if the position of the electron in time T1 is ( 5,4,3) using 3 dimensional cartesian co ordinates and is (9,8,4) at another time T2.
That is the electron undergoes motion whether it is the isolated electron in free space by some mysterious unknown force or driven by electrical imbalance in copper conductor or a ball mechanically hit by a bat.
Magnetic field is generated in case 2, there is experimental evidence- electromagnets and CRT.
Case 1 and 3 have similarities, that is the electric field of the electron which is under discussion is not disturbed before, during and after the motion. The motion is not driven by electrical imbalance but by other non electrical forces.
So the questions are, Do the creation of magnetic field by the electron needs motion? and should the motion must be created by electrical forces alone? Do the motion created by mechanical and gravitational forces on electron produce magnetic field?