SAZAR
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Does proton create a magnetic field when it moves, and is it different (and if: how) from magnetic field electron creates?
zoobyshoe said:That's a VERY good question. I've wondered about it myself and don't know the answer. Hopefully someone else will have some insight into this.SAZAR said:Does proton create a magnetic field when it moves, and is it different (and if: how) from magnetic field electron creates?
Are you just guessing, or you've read about it somewhere so you know it for a fact?marcusl said:Same but opposite sign (direction).
It is not a guess. The magnetic field produced by a moving charge depends on the velocity, the charge, and where you are in relation to the charge. Since electrons and protons have equal and opposite charges, the fields they create are equal and opposite given the same motion.SAZAR said:Are you just guessing, or you've read about it somewhere so you know it for a fact?
It's a 10. No doubt about itrewebster said:why electrical current passing thorough (e.g. a wire) makes the magnetic field that it creates "swirl" and always in the same direction?
Is it not very important?--'sort of' important?
--say, on a scale from 1 to 10, where '1' is not important at all to '10' very important?
So this isn't too important in fundamental theoretical physics, then?-
--or is it something that is just ignored (for some reason)?
Anyone?
zoobyshoe said:Somewhere in there must be the explanation for the field having unidirectional "rotational sense", and for why two conductors parallel to each other carrying current in the same direction attract each other.
Viewing a hydrogen atom from the electrons stationary lab frame you could give the old argument that the fine structure splitting of the hydrogen spectra is due to the spin orbit coupling of the orbiting proton's magnetic field with the spin magnetic moment of the electron (there would not be an additional angular magnetic moment coupling since, according to the electron's frame, it is at rest.) Of course, this is a bit botchy in real life because the electron is not in an inertial frame. Nevertheless, the idea of proton induced magnetic fields is entirely valid.SAZAR said:Are you just guessing, or you've read about it somewhere so you know it for a fact?