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PeterPeter
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How can you possibly have a magnetic monopole? The field lines must terminate somewhere, surely!
I heard about them on a cosmology video on YouTube.
I heard about them on a cosmology video on YouTube.
field lines from a magnetic monopole may end on a magnetic monopole of opposite magnetic charge.How can you possibly have a magnetic monopole? The field lines must terminate somewhere, surely!
That's a good reason not to get your physics from videos on YouTube.
But if you are going to indulge, at least give us the link so that we can tell you whether that particular video is any good. In this case, I'm skeptical because there are no magnetic monopoles.
Not so fast. The standard model predicts the existence of magnetic monopoles. Look up "T hooft Polyakov monopole"
No, magnetic field lines can start and end on magnetic monopoles as ## \nabla \cdot B=\rho_\mathrm{m}##, where ##\rho_\mathrm{m}## is the magnetic monopole density. Only if the latter is zero, the magnetic field is divergence free.Magnetic field lines don't terminate. They go in loops.
Magnetic field lines don't terminate. They go in loops.
Magnetic monopoles are possible in the sense that they aren't ruled out by our known laws, but we haven't found them so they probably don't exist.
No, magnetic field lines can start and end on magnetic monopoles.
1. Wouldn't this mean that there are as many north monopoles as there are south monopoles? In other words they come in pairs?
If the universe is closed, yes.
2. Suppose then there were just two monopoles in the (multi)universe, wouldn't this mean that the field would look identical to that of a (gigantic) bar magnet?