How do light's magnetic fields work?

AI Thread Summary
Light consists of electromagnetic waves, which include both electric and magnetic fields oscillating perpendicular to each other. The magnetic field in light does not have distinct north and south poles like static magnetic fields; instead, it propagates in a manner that is more akin to flattened ellipses rather than loops. These magnetic field lines are not concentric circles as seen around current-carrying wires but are straight lines in the context of the wave's direction of travel. The interaction between changing electric and magnetic fields allows electromagnetic waves to self-propagate. Understanding this relationship is key to grasping how light's magnetic fields function in the context of Maxwell's Equations.
personpersonp
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This is just a conceptual question that I've been personally wondering about. So light has a magnetic field wave perpendicular to an electric field wave. I don't quite understand the magnetic field wave though.

I thought that magnetic fields were not supposed to have a beginning or end. They continuously travel in a loop from north pole to south pole. How then does light's magnetic fields work? Where are the north and south poles and where are the loops? How is it that the diagrams just depict linear magnetic field vectors?

Diagram example: http://www.google.com/imgres?um=1&h...=195&start=0&ndsp=15&ved=1t:429,r:8,s:0,i:164

I have googled this to a great extent but have not been able to find an answer.

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
 
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Thanks for the reply ehild.

I know that the light wave is self propagating with its changes in electric flux and magnetic flux.

My question, however, is that in an EM wave are the magnetic field lines also something like concentric circles like that of around a current carrying wire? Or are they really just straight lines pointing in one direction?
 
personpersonp said:
Thanks for the reply ehild.

I know that the light wave is self propagating with its changes in electric flux and magnetic flux.

My question, however, is that in an EM wave are the magnetic field lines also something like concentric circles like that of around a current carrying wire? Or are they really just straight lines pointing in one direction?

The are like concentric circles around the changing electric field lines, which are circles around the magnetic field lines.

ehild
 

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They are not rings but more like flattened ellipses.
 
horizontally is time, so these aren't loops in space like magnetic field line loops.
 
horizontally is time, so these aren't loops in space like magnetic field line loops.
 
BTW i only did the one post, are multiple repeat postings a common bug on PF?

(as you can see the system knows they are both my third post, but has them logged at different times!)
 
it happens sometimes! :smile:

i think it's when you click "Submit Reply" but nothing happens, so you click again :wink:
 
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