Is there any effect of wire's insulation on it's magnetic an

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Insulation does influence the electromagnetic propagation speed along a wire, particularly in transmission lines, affecting the velocity factor (VF). While insulation impacts the electric field due to its higher dielectric constant, it does not significantly affect the magnetic field generated by the wire. The magnetic permeability of typical insulation materials is low, meaning they have minimal interaction with magnetic fields. However, if insulation includes a conductive sheath, such as in coaxial cables, it can affect the magnetic field due to the sheath's high permeability. Overall, insulation primarily affects electric fields rather than magnetic fields.
dumbboy340
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Does insulation affect electric and magnetic field?
 
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What's the purpose of insulating a wire?
 
That is what I'm asking.If it does,why a magnet interacts it?i'm confused.please explain it??
 
Insulation does affect the EM propagation speed along the outside of a wire
This becomes very apparent with transmission lines ( antennas) that have either a covering
The result is a slowing of the EM propagation, This is known as the VF -- Velocity Factor

Dave
 
I'm not sure that a magnetic field on its own is affected by insulation
That I would have to research
 
dumbboy340 said:
That is what I'm asking.If it does,why a magnet interacts it?i'm confused.please explain it??

Why do you think a magnetic field interacts with insulation? It does not. As stated already, insulation has a higher dielectric constant than air, so it will affect the E field generated by voltages on the wire (including the velocity factor that Dave has mentioned).
 
Thanks!
 
I guess if you're counting a sheath (like in coaxial cable) as the insulation, then it certainly affects the B field produced by the wire because the metal intentionally has high permeability. Otherwise plastic wouldn't have a noticeable effect.
 
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