burgjeff
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The M field is the density of induced or permanent magnetic dipole moments. It is analogous to the P field in electrostatics. In electrostatics, the induced P field in a dielectric is proportional to the applied electric field. This is intuitive to me. Why though, in magnetostatics, is the M field proportional to the Demagnetizing field(the H field).
M=X_{m}H=X<div style="text-align: center">​</div>_{m}(\frac{B}{u_{0}}+M)
I can't seem to wrap my head around this. My textbook declares it without any justification. Can anyone provide me some insight into this?
Thank you.
M=X_{m}H=X<div style="text-align: center">​</div>_{m}(\frac{B}{u_{0}}+M)
I can't seem to wrap my head around this. My textbook declares it without any justification. Can anyone provide me some insight into this?
Thank you.