Magnetic field lines and magnetic flux density

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the relationship between magnetic field lines and magnetic flux density, specifically how the number of field lines correlates with the strength of the magnetic field, denoted as B (measured in Teslas). Participants agree that while field lines are a conceptual tool for visualizing magnetic fields, they do not represent a finite number of lines in reality. Instead, the density of these lines can indicate field strength, and the concept of field lines passing through every point in space is debated. The conversation highlights the distinction between field lines and lines of flux, emphasizing their utility in understanding electromagnetism.

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  • Understanding of magnetic field concepts, specifically magnetic flux density (B) in Teslas.
  • Familiarity with the concept of field lines and their representation in physics.
  • Basic knowledge of electromagnetism and the behavior of magnetic fields.
  • Awareness of the differences between scalar and vector quantities in physics.
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  • Explore the mathematical representation of magnetic fields using vector calculus.
  • Study the implications of the Heaviside-Lorentz force equation on charged particles in magnetic fields.
  • Investigate the historical context and evolution of magnetic flux units, including the maxwell.
  • Learn about the practical applications of magnetic field visualization in engineering and design.
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AlanTuring
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I'm trying to understand the relationship between the "number" of field lines passing through a region and the magnetic force in this region.I understand that the drawings are of course conceptual: we cannot draw "all" the field lines (although can be visualized with iron fillings).Also the magnetic field B⃗

(measured in Teslas) and called "magnetic flux density". This is often considered as the "strength" of the field (the magnitude of the vector at a given point of the vector field).I also read that one can consider that the strength of the magnetic field B

is proportional to the number of field lines in the region. With the vector field approach one would rather say that the vector at point (x,y,z)
in space have a given magnitude and that this magnitude is the "strenght" of the magnetic field.How can we put the 2 together? Can we say that there really is physically a certain number of field lines passing by a region of space?
 
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AlanTuring said:
How can we put the 2 together?
They are just two different ways of plotting the same data, so you could easily draw both together in the same plot. Basically you would have a standard vector field plot where some of the vectors are joined together to form streamlines.
 
Thanks, I understand that, this is not really my question though. My question is rather, can we consider there is physically "more lines" passing through a region? Can we say "informally" : if more field lines pass through an area of x square meters then the field is stronger?
 
Certainly. It is simply another way to describe the same thing. Talking about field strength vectors is no more nor less physical than talking about flux lines.
 
On another forum someone says that "there is a field line passing through every point in space " ... what would that mean? It doesn't seem to make sense to me... we would need to have less field lines in some regions otherwise it would be all the same
 
AlanTuring said:
On another forum someone says that "there is a field line passing through every point in space " ... what would that mean? It doesn't seem to make sense to me... we would need to have less field lines in some regions otherwise it would be all the same
Disregarding the places where the field is zero, does it make sense to you that there is a field at every point? The direction of that field is tangent to the field line that passes through that point. As you said in an earlier post, we typically draw only a representative number of those lines.
 
No it does not make sense that there is a field line at every point, which is why I ask the question... However, I know space is continuous, formulas use integrals, etc. But the "conceptual" idea of field line at every point seems contradictory with the idea of saying that there are denser regions than others (i.e. more field lines in region A than region B) ... ?
 
Does it help if we say that we can imagine field lines at every point in space and calculate using that assumption ?
Making life a little more complicated, there was a unit of magnetic flux in the obsolete CGS system called the "line" (later called the maxwell) equal to 1 G-cm2. So for a given N pole face with a 1 Gauss field, there would be 1 line emitted normal per sguare cm. To my knowledge nobody attaches a standard value to a line anymore but the density of lines is still very useful as a visualization of field strength and they are sometimes calibrated on a drawing so one can determine flux by counting lines.
Obviously the exact placement of each line is ambiguous but their relative density and their direction is not.
 
AlanTuring said:
But the "conceptual" idea of field line at every point seems contradictory with the idea of saying that there are denser regions than others
Only if you are thinking of a countable number of lines. If you have an uncountable number then both properties are compatible.
 
  • #10
Dale can you elaborate...I am not really understanding your point. Are you saying that the normalization is not fixed?
 
  • #11
hutchphd said:
Dale can you elaborate...I am not really understanding your point. Are you saying that the normalization is not fixed?
Since there are an uncountable number of points in space then if you have a field line through each you must have an uncountable number of field lines.

With an uncountable number of lines you can have one for each point even if they diverge. For instance, consider the family of lines through the origin in the plane parameterized by ##y=mx ##. One and only one line passes through each point in the line segment ##x=1## and ##0<y<1##, each line corresponding to one ##m## in ##0<m<1##. They diverge such that those same lines pass through the larger segment ##x=2## and ##0<y<2##.

So even though the lines are less dense at ##x=2## there is still one through each point. This is what @AlanTuring thought was contradictory, but it is one of those weird things that can happen with uncountable sets like the continuum.

Since we can’t draw an infinite number of lines, we just draw a few. That means that our drawing can show the “lines diverge” idea but not the “line through every point” idea. But that is just a limitation in our drawing, the mathematical continuum of lines is not so limited.
 
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  • #12
While I know what you say is true in general, the B field has zero divergence and so the lines cannot behave in the way you describe (?) Further the notion of a field "line" in this context just seems to me not useful for discussion. Why worry about it?
 
  • #13
hutchphd said:
the B field has zero divergence and so the lines cannot behave in the way you describe (?)
That is not correct. I am not sure why you think it is.

Edit: maybe you are thinking that if the field lines diverge it means the field has divergence? But that is not the case because the field lines are just integral curves of the field, not the field itself. The magnitude of the field can change along the integral curve to keep 0 divergence.

hutchphd said:
Further the notion of a field "line" in this context just seems to me not useful for discussion. Why worry about it?
I often use field lines to reason about electromagnetism.
 
  • #14
I don't spend much time in the transfinite realm. I understand your argument and I see it is correct but I will need think about the context a little more. Thanks (it is past my witching hour for today!)
 
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  • #15
Perhaps another (less rigorous) way to look at it is to pick some small area and trace the field lines running through the edges of it. Since field lines can't cross, any field lines crossing the initially chosen area must remain in the volume you've just defined. But field lines don't stay parallel, so the cross sectional area isn't constant and the field line density must be changing.

"Number of field lines" probably isn't really helpful because it reinforces the notion that there are a finite number of field lines. There aren't. The things you see when you drop iron filings in a magnetic field are a kind of self-organising behaviour of the filings in a magnetic field. I commented on it in an Insight article I wrote.
 
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  • #16
Dale said:
I often use field lines to reason about electromagnetism
But for me there is a subtle distinction between "field" lines and lines of flux. When I represent a field by line pictures , either in my head or on paper, I choose a particular finite (countable) subset of the field lines defined to represent a particular unit of flux per line. This choice can be made to pass a line of flux through anyone point but not, in general, any other arbitrary point, and only one choice is allowed per diagram.

Ibix said:
"Number of field lines" probably isn't really helpful because it reinforces the notion that there are a finite number of field lines.
I guess I disagree as to their utility of flux lines . A diagram without the density feature would not be very useful as it would not provide any clues as to field strength without further annotation. I have designed some very useful magnets using flux lines and a piece of paper. Perhaps those days are long past.
I certainly do agree that the notion can be confusing and likely was the crux of this discussion! But I would just be careful to use the terms interchangeably: as is so often the case I believe the issue is mostly semantic.
 
  • #17
hutchphd said:
But for me there is a subtle distinction between "field" lines and lines of flux.
Indeed, the distinction is subtle. It is too subtle a distinction for me to spot.
 
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  • #18
I would point out that they carry different units.
 
  • #19
I didn’t know that the lines carried units at all. Are you just saying that the magnetic field and magnetic flux have different units?
 
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  • #20
hutchphd said:
I guess I disagree as to their utility of flux lines . A diagram without the density feature would not be very useful as it would not provide any clues as to field strength without further annotation. I have designed some very useful magnets using flux lines and a piece of paper.
You seem to be describing something slightly different from what I was considering. In the diagrams in my Insight, I merely drew a finite set of integral curves of the magnetic field, with no "strength" association. If I'm understanding you correctly, you pick a finite set of integral curves of the field and call these "flux lines". Then you assign the total magnetic flux through some area around each chosen curve (edit: presumably so that the total across your lines captures all flux) to that line - right?

Certainly with what I drew, "number of field lines" is a somewhat incomplete description. With what you seem to be describing, you don't want "number of flux lines" either - you need to weight by your strength value, I think. Unless you choose your curves so that the strength is equal for all, I suppose.

Assuming I've understood correctly then, like @Dale, I must say I've never seen this before.
 
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  • #21
As far as I know, there is no such thing as a line of flux. Certainly you determine the relative amount of flux by looking at the relative number of field lines passing through different surfaces.

A property of field lines is that the field is tangent to the line at any given point. But flux is a scalar quantity.
 
  • #22
Dale said:
I didn’t know that the lines carried units at all. Are you just saying that the magnetic field and magnetic flux have different units?
Yes the (derived) CGS unit of magnetic flux is the maxwell.

1 maxwell ≡ 1 gauss cm2t​

The archaic CGS unit for flux was the line which is equal to the maxwell. Obviously the flux density and field carry the same unit.
As I mentioned these distinctions are mostly semantic but the drawing of "fields lines" willy nilly without any further prescription about their density renders the diagram unrecognizable. I have always called this construction "lines of flux" to emphasize the (subtle) difference. I assumed it was common usage but perhaps not. (It should be!?)
Incidently when drawing lines of flux each field/flux line always attaches to a the same fixed amount of "charge" (electric or magnetic) at the sources. So you can draw the field pictures largely sans calculation.

@Ibix I apologize for not yet having read your insight article but look forward to doing so. I believe you understood what I was trying to say.
 
  • #23
I think the two ways to visualize the magnetic field are both valid referring simply to different points of view, both of which are physically useful in different contexts.

The ##\vec{B}##-field (in modern terminology called the magnetic field) is operationally defined by its action on point charges. The force on a charge due to the magnetic field (in Heaviside-Lorentz or Gaussian units, because the SI is a nuissance when it comes to the physical understanding of electromagnetism though it's much more convenient for practical purposes in engineering) is
$$\vec{F}_{\text{mag}}=\frac{q}{c} \vec{v} \times \vec{B}(t,vec{x}).$$
Here the intensity and direction of ##\vec{B}## at the position ##\vec{x}## is important, giving the strength and direction of the force on the charge. I.e., here a picture with field vectors at each point in space (at a given time) is most intuitive.

Another important aspect is Faraday's Law of induction,
$$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{E}=-\frac{1}{c} \partial_t \vec{B}.$$
Putting it in integral form (for simplicity for a surface ##A## and its boundary ##\partial A## assumed to be at rest in the computational reference frame) it reads, using Stokes's integral theorem
$$\int_{\partial A} \mathrm{d} \vec{x} \cdot \vec{E}=-\frac{1}{c} \mathrm{d}_t \int_A \mathrm{d}^2 \vec{f} \cdot \vec{B}.$$
Here at the right-hand side the flux of the magnetic field through the surface ##A## is of importance. Here it's more intuitive to imagine ##\vec{B}## as a flow field "streaming" through the surface. Here the corresponding "field-line picture" describes the situation best.
 
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  • #24
Mr Turing I think to get an understanding of this you could do the following. Go back to the beginning if necessary:

1. Get a bit of a bit of an understanding of the concept of field lines, which you already have.
2. Get familiar with the magnitude and directions of the forces on current carrying conductors and moving charged particles in B fields.
3. Look (again) at the equations that quantify the forces and see that they make sense. In fact when you think about it they're predictable.
4. Ideally look at the experiments that can be done to verify the equations.
5. Get an understanding of the definition of the unit you use to measure magnetic flux density eg the Tesla (T)
6. Get an understanding of how magnetic flux is related mathematically to magnetic flux density. Get familiar with the unit of magnetic flux density eg the Weber (Wb).

In your original post the points you made were very valid so if we say, for example, that magnetic flux is proportional to concentration of field lines and magnetic flux is proportional to number of field lines the descriptions can be considered as being vague to the point of being meaningless. But, the concept of field lines can be useful, for example it can give an intuitive feeling what we mean by concepts such as "the strength of a magnetic field at a particular point". So use the concept of field lines if it helps. But remember that the concept is very flawed. Of course you know that already.
 
  • #25
Dadface said:
So use the concept of field lines if it helps. But remember that the concept is very flawed
Why is it flawed? It is just another way of thinking about the field.
 
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  • #26
Dale said:
Why is it flawed? It is just another way of thinking about the field.
It is another way of thinking about the field and if used with care it can be useful. But it can be confusing as well as evidenced by Mr Turings post. If, for example, magnetic flux is described as being proportional to number of field lines, what is that number and what is the constant of proportionality?
 
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  • #27
Dadface said:
But it can be confusing as well as evidenced by Mr Turings post.
By that standard every single concept in physics is “very flawed”.

I know that I frequently use the concept to reach correct conclusions about the behavior of EM fields. So I simply disagree that it is flawed. All concepts have to be used correctly and can be confusing, so I don’t think that is a problem. I think “very flawed” should be reserved for concepts that produce incorrect conclusions when used correctly.
 
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  • #28
Dale said:
By that standard every single concept in physics is “very flawed”.

I know that I frequently use the concept to reach correct conclusions about the behavior of EM fields. So I simply disagree that it is flawed. All concepts have to be used correctly and can be confusing, so I don’t think that is a problem. I think “very flawed” should be reserved for concepts that produce incorrect conclusions when used correctly.

My posts were reacting to post one where it was pointed out that flux density can be described in terms of concentration of field lines. We have good experimentally based mathematical equations defining terms such as flux density and flux and these make sense. But we read definitions similar to the following which don't make sense.

The flux through a surface is equal to the number of field lines through that surface.

What number would that be? What is the flux? The concept of field lines is flawed when it is used in a quantitative way to make definitions such as the one above.

I agree that the concept is useful when used correctly. But it is used incorrectly in many places as can be shown by a quick google search. And Mr Turing seemed to have spotted that ... he described what he had read and questioned it.
 
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  • #29
Dadface said:
I agree that the concept is useful when used correctly. But it is used incorrectly in many places as can be shown by a quick google search.

Again, the same thing can be said about just about every other concept in physics.
 
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  • #30
Mister T said:
Again, the same thing can be said about just about every other concept in physics.

That may be true but I don't see the relevance of the comment. My posts here have been made with reference to the opening post and to one concept only, the concept of field lines. Many people have used that concept to make quantitative definitions that are wrong. Check it for yourself, for example by googling "definition of magnetic flux" and or magnetic flux density". You will see some good definitions and you will see some bad definitions. An example of a bad definition is given below:

Magnetic flux is defined as the number of field lines passing through a given area.

Definitions such as the one above don't make sense and that seems to be the reason why the person who wrote the opening post got confused. The concept of field lines, though useful, has shortcomings that don't seem to be realized by the people who write the bad definitions.
 
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