What kind of current creates magnetism?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the types of electric currents that create magnetism, specifically focusing on direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC). Participants explore the nature of magnetic fields produced by these currents and their implications in applications like transformers.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions whether both DC and AC currents create magnetism, expressing confusion about the nature of the currents involved.
  • Another participant asserts that a constant current (DC) produces a constant magnetic field, referencing historical context from Hans Christian Oersted's experiments.
  • It is noted that an alternating current (AC) produces a magnetic field that alternates, which in turn generates an alternating electric field, a principle utilized in transformers.
  • A further contribution explains that with DC, a constant magnetic field surrounds a wire, while AC causes the magnetic field to expand and collapse, affecting nearby wires and generating an AC in them.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the effects of DC and AC on magnetic fields, with some clarifying the behavior of each type of current. The discussion remains open, with no consensus reached on the nuances of how these currents interact with magnetic fields.

Contextual Notes

The discussion does not resolve the complexities of how magnetic fields are generated by different types of currents, nor does it address potential limitations in the explanations provided.

eranb2
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Hi

I read in some book that current creates magnetism.
but what current? DC or AC currents?
steady or changing currents?
transformers works with ac currents and not with dc.
this is confusing me...

Thanks
 
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Either kind. A constant current, i.e. direct current, produces a constant magnet field. It was "well known" that static electricity did not affect a magnet and thought that electric and magnetic fields were completely different thing until Hans Christian Oersted, in 1820, happened to place a compass beside a wire with electricity flowing through it. The compass did not point toward or away from the wire but turned parallel to the wire.

An alternating current will produce a magnetic field that is not constant but alternates itself- which in turn produces an alternating electric field- that is how a transformer works, changing one type of electric field into another.
 
Just wanted to add to the transformer part. If you have two wires next to each other (in parallel) and have a DC through one, there will be a constant magnetic field around that one wire and the other wire will have no current/no field while sitting in the static field of the first wire.

Pass AC instead of DC and the field constantly reverses, expanding from and collapsing onto the wire each time it cycles. This has the effect of the second wire passing through a magnetic field (the field passing around the wire is relatively equal to the wire moving through the field) which will generate an AC in the second wire whose power (watts) is the same but whose volts and amps may be different depending on the wire ratios.
 
Thanks a lot for the info.
now I get it.
 

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