Understanding Magnetic Dipoles: Forces and Equations Explained

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Magnetic dipoles, such as spinning electrons and current loops, generate forces and fields described by equations similar to those for electric dipoles. A current loop with area A and current i has a magnetic dipole moment defined as μ = iA, with the moment often expressed as a vector perpendicular to the area. The torque on a dipole in an external field is given by the cross product of the dipole moment and the magnetic field, while the energy in the field is represented by the negative dot product of the two. The net force on a dipole in a constant magnetic field is zero, but a varying magnetic field can produce a net force based on the gradient of the field. Understanding these principles is crucial for applications involving magnetic dipoles in various fields of physics.
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here seems to be some interest in magnetic dipoles, such as spinning electrons, and current loops. So I thought I would start a thread and present some of the relevant equations that describe the forces and fields generated by magnetic dipoles. These equations are very similar to those for electric dipoles, BTW.

A current loop with an area A and carrying a current i has a
magnetic dipole moment of \mu = i A. The dipole moment is sometimes expressed as a vector \vec{\mu} in which case the vector is perpendicular to the area A.

Some useful properties of the diople moment are given below

Torque generated by an external field \vec{\mu} \times \vec{B}

Energy in an external field -\vec{\mu} \cdot \vec{B}

Field from dipole at distant points along axis |B| = \frac {\mu_0}{2 \pi} \frac {\mu}{r^3}

Field from dipole at distant points along bisector |B| = \frac {\mu_0}{4 \pi} \frac {\mu}{r^3}

Field from dipole, vector form \vec{B} = \frac {\mu_0 \mu}{4 \pi r^3} (2 cos(\theta) \vec{r} + sin(\theta) \vec{\theta})

Net force on dipole from a constant magnetic field zero

Net force on a dipole from a varying magnetic field \nabla (\vec{\mu} \cdot \vec{B})

Note that the force between two dipoles will drop off with the 4th power of the distance - as the field generated by a dipole is proportional to 1/r^3, the gradient of the field is proportional to 1/r^4, and the force will be the dipole moment multiplied by the field gradient.
 
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pervect said:
Net force on dipole from a constant magnetic field zero

Net force on a dipole from a varying magnetic field \nabla (\vec{\mu} \cdot \vec{B})

"Constant" or "varying" usually means w.r.t. time. I think here you mean w.r.t. space, so common usage is "uniform" or "non-uniform".
 
krab said:
"Constant" or "varying" usually means w.r.t. time. I think here you mean w.r.t. space, so common usage is "uniform" or "non-uniform".

Yes, that's what I mean. To develop a net force, one needs the field to be different at the two ends of the dipole, which means that the field must be varying in space.
 
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