What is Electromagnetism: Definition and 842 Discussions

Electromagnetism is a branch of physics involving the study of the electromagnetic force, a type of physical interaction that occurs between electrically charged particles. The electromagnetic force is carried by electromagnetic fields composed of electric fields and magnetic fields, and it is responsible for electromagnetic radiation such as light. It is one of the four fundamental interactions (commonly called forces) in nature, together with the strong interaction, the weak interaction, and gravitation. At high energy, the weak force and electromagnetic force are unified as a single electroweak force.

Electromagnetic phenomena are defined in terms of the electromagnetic force, sometimes called the Lorentz force, which includes both electricity and magnetism as different manifestations of the same phenomenon. The electromagnetic force plays a major role in determining the internal properties of most objects encountered in daily life. The electromagnetic attraction between atomic nuclei and their orbital electrons holds atoms together. Electromagnetic forces are responsible for the chemical bonds between atoms which create molecules, and intermolecular forces. The electromagnetic force governs all chemical processes, which arise from interactions between the electrons of neighboring atoms. Electromagnetism is very widely used in modern technology, and electromagnetic theory is the basis of electric power engineering and electronics including digital technology.
There are numerous mathematical descriptions of the electromagnetic field. Most prominently, Maxwell's equations describe how electric and magnetic fields are generated and altered by each other and by charges and currents.
The theoretical implications of electromagnetism, particularly the establishment of the speed of light based on properties of the "medium" of propagation (permeability and permittivity), led to the development of special relativity by Albert Einstein in 1905.

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  1. R

    Finding the maximum value of current through the inductor

    Homework Statement Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution [/B] I got the first 2 parts, but I'm having trouble with the last one. For the time the switch S1 is closed, I derived ##q(t) = CE(1 - \cos(\frac{t}{\sqrt{LC}}))##, by writing the loop equation ##\frac{E}{L} - \frac{1}{LC}q =...
  2. ?

    EM fields of two opposite moving point charges

    I wrote and solved this problem but am having serious doubts about the answer I obtained. Homework Statement Two point charges \pm q move along the z-axis with velocity \pm v. If they are at the origin when t=0, what is the electric field magnitude a distance r from the z-axis? Homework...
  3. T

    Studying External resources to help prepare for Electromagnetism?

    Some background info: I am an international student that is currently studying at a supposedly prestigious university (Top 20 in QS and Times Higher Education ranking). As part of my major requirement, I am taking an EM module. The problem is, my forte is not really physics (I am an IBO...
  4. TheBigDig

    Time-dependent potential difference between two ends of a loop

    Homework Statement A straight copper wire that carries a sinusoidal current with an alternating frequency of 50 Hz and a maximum amplitude of 0.5 A passes through the centre of a circular ring of a second copper wire, with the two wires orientated perpendicularly to each other. The radius of...
  5. T

    Confirming my logic on potential difference

    Homework Statement You’ve decided to protect your house by placing a 5.0 m tall iron lightning rod next to the house. The top is sharpened to a point and the bottom is in good contact with the ground. From your research, you’ve learned that lightning bolts can carry up to 50 kA of current and...
  6. M

    Electromagnetism, Auxiliary field

    Homework Statement I only need help with part C and D Homework Equations Curl of B = mu0 J J = J free + J bound H = B/mu0 - M The Attempt at a Solution For C i, I said they're the same because free current is the same at both points. My argument is that because curl of B (at L) = mu0 Jfree...
  7. CAT 2

    Electromagnetism and magnetic stuff

    Homework Statement Currently I am taking a course that teaches half the material and let's you figure out/ guess the other half. I have been pretty good at succeeding in this so far, but this one has me stumped. It is on my practice test. What in the world does this diagram mean?Homework...
  8. R

    Why Does Current Produce a Magnetic Field But Not Vice Versa?

    Why does current produce a static magnetic field, but a static magnetic field doesn't produce current? Specifically, why is one true, but the inverse not true? I can accept that each rule individually is just how the universe works... but it sounds so contradictory when I examine both together...
  9. Matt Chu

    Potential Energies of Two Charged Cylinders

    Homework Statement Problem 1.24 (this is unimportant; it's just a different way of calculating the potential energy of a solid cylinder) gives one way of calculating the energy per unit length stored in a solid cylinder with radius a and uniform volume charge density ##\rho##. Calculate the...
  10. Matt Chu

    Angle of escaping electric field lines

    Homework Statement Two charges 2q and -q are located at x = 0 and x = a respectively. There are field lines extending from the positive charge and lines going inwards to the negative charge. Some of these lines go from the positive charge to the negative, but some go off to infinity from the...
  11. L

    Calculate a charge distribution given an electric potential.

    Homework Statement Find the distribution of charge giving rise to an electric field whose potential is $$\Phi (x,y) = 2~tan^{-1}(\frac{1+x}{y}) + 2~tan^{-1}(\frac{1-x}{y})$$where x and y are Cartesian coordinates. Such a distribution is called a two-dimensional one since it does not depend on...
  12. Jianphys17

    Question on classical electron radius

    Hi at everyone, why on wiki there is written: " According to modern understanding, the electron is a point particle with a point charge and no spatial extent. Attempts to model the electron as a non-point particle are considered ill-conceived and counter-pedagogic " I don't understand this...
  13. C

    Can an axisymmetric electric field be created without charges?

    That is, a field that accelerates charges in opposite directions on each side of an axis. I was thinking about interference of similarly polarized waves traveling in opposite directions (so that electric field peaks and valleys overlap but magnetic field adds constructively) - would there be an...
  14. chandrahas

    Why doesn't a magnetically levitating conductor oscillate?

    I was watching this video of veritasium today and was wondering why the aluminum plate doesn't oscillate when there is a changing magnetic flux. When the flux is increasing, the induced magnetic field (by the induced current) is against the magnetic field of the coil and this acts like 2 north...
  15. R

    Magnetic field and Poynting Flux in an Inductor

    Hi everyone, Lately I have been studying the Poynting Flux and I am familiar with the classic examples of how it can be used to describe the power being dissipated by a resistor and the energy flowing into a capacitor, but I have never come across a similar analog for how the Poynting flux...
  16. F

    Emitted Radiation: Understanding Radiative Damping & Frequency Multiples

    In this page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_mechanics I don't understand this statement : "When a classical particle is weakly coupled to a https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Radiation_field&action=edit&redlink=1, so that the radiative damping can be neglected, it will emit...
  17. Fraser MacDonald

    What is the electrostatic force field?

    I have just covered the electricity unit in my advanced higher physics course, and have happily accepted that a force is created between charged particles. I understand that coulombs law can be used to calculate this force, but here is my question. What actually is this force between the charged...
  18. G

    B How To Consistently Explain Electromagnetism With Relativity

    Superconducting Ring In a superconducting ring does the contraction of space between electrons cause them to move inwards? Like in this animation. Force Between Parallel Wires With Current In the proton frame of two parallel wires with identical current, I've been told they attract and this...
  19. F

    B What's the relationship between drop height and induced emf?

    In my experiment, I intended to find out how the change in the bar magnet drop height from solenoid affected the emf induced in the solenoid, however, I am unable to come up with an equation that shows a relationship between the two variables. I have thought of Biot-Savart law, but I do not...
  20. astrocytosis

    Magnetic field inside and outside of a magnetized cylinder

    Homework Statement An infinitely long cylinder of radius R carries a "frozen-in" magnetization, parallel to the axis, ## \vec M = ks \hat z ##. There are no free currents. Find the magnetic field inside and outside the cylinder by two different methods: (a) Locate all the bound currents and...
  21. M

    Transformers and Electromagnetism

    Homework Statement An electric doorbell requires a 12 V 60Hz ac supply a)What turn ratio is required on a transformer to operate from a 120V 60Hz ac supply? b)Step-up or step-down? c)If the transformer is connected the wrong way around the circuit what voltage is supplied to the...
  22. Hawksteinman

    New effect of electromagnetism discovered?

    https://phys.org/news/2017-10-effect-electromagnetism-years.html This was in my FB feed, was wondering how big this is
  23. M

    How to calculate the force of a charge through its kinetic Energy?

    Good Afternoon Is it correct to calculate the force of a point charge by relating the force to the kinetic energy and this with its derivative? I have the graphic V/r (Velocity Vs Space), want to calculate force, relate work with force in this way: W=ΔEk, in my case the kinetic energy initial is...
  24. Ryaners

    Calculating B:I for Helmholtz coils

    Homework Statement I've completed an experiment where the dependence of magnetic field strength ##B## on current ##I## is measured at the midpoint along the axis between two Helmholtz coils (separation distance = coil radius ##r##). I got the expected linear relationship from the data but am...
  25. F

    Please clear my electromagnetism doubt about units

    It is a well known fact that, in electromagnetic units, strength of a shell and strength of current flowing through its boundary are same. See here. \begin{equation} \begin{matrix} \text{i.e.}\: i \text{(biot)} = \phi \text{(biot) } \end{matrix} \tag{1} \end{equation} (a) While converting to...
  26. P

    I Electromagnetism in the Lithosphere and Ionosphere

    Hi guys, Disclaimer: not a physicist (I wish I was that brainy) Quick question regarding a speculative architecture project I am undertaking; In the completely hypothetical event of a huge, otherworldly solar flare super-charging the Earth's ionosphere beyond anything we have ever recorded...
  27. F

    I Why am I getting two different results in emu and SI unit?

    I am computing force between two magnetic poles each of one unit pole (in emu) and situated one centimeter apart. In electromagnetic units: ##F_{dyne}=\dfrac{p^2}{r_{cm}^2}=\dfrac{1^2}{1^2}=1 dyne## where ##p## is pole strength in emu In SI units: ##F_{N}=k_A \dfrac{P^2}{r_m^2}=10^{-7}...
  28. PainterGuy

    Some questions about electromagnetism

    Hi, Could you please help me with the queries below? Thank you. Question 1: Please have a look on this attachment. In the given attachment, the disk is mounted vertically and only a part of the disk passes thru the magnetic field at any instant. If entire surface of the disk was rotating in a...
  29. T

    B Electric+Magnetic Force Between a & b Charges: Inertial Frames

    Let's assume that a and b charges are moving. now in our lab frame there will be a electric+magnetic force whereas in a rest frame of either of the charges, there will be only an electric force. So, two inertial observers will measure different forces?
  30. P

    Are there cert courses/MOOCs about Electromagnetism in 2017?

    Hello everyone, I'm currently doing a CSE bachelor (europe) in which I'll focus on physics. Now, I'd like to also put in some extra work to strengthen my focus on physics. This will put me ahead of others but it might also give me the chance of doing a masters in physics. Anyway, currently...
  31. Moayd Shagaf

    Classical Griffiths Electrodynamics vs Pollack Electromagnetism.

    I try to learn electrodynamics as theoretical physicist, Now I study from Griffiths, I find it very good book and do the job! but the problem I need to learn electrodynamic to do future topics like Quantum Electrodynamics, and Pollack I find it good and modern, so my question is what is the best...
  32. mertcan

    Studying Finite element analysis for Electromagnetism

    HI, initially I would like to put into words that there are sufficient resources, books or lecture videos on YouTube related to finite element analysis especially for structural dynamics (for instance JURGEN BATHE in MIT). But I would like to make you sure that there NO lecture videos or other...
  33. E

    Spherical magnet dropped through aluminum pole rotates?

    Lenz's law shows that dropping a magnet through an aluminum pole will cause an induced current that slows down its fall drastically. I found a website that talks about this a little: https://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/TTT-slowfall/slowfall.htm It has the following question: I don't see any...
  34. L

    Jackson's 6.4 - Uniformly magnetized conducting sphere

    Homework Statement A uniformly magnetized and conducting sphere of radius R and total magnetic moment m = 4\pi MR^3/3 rotates about its magnetization axis with angular speed \omega. In the steady state no current flows in the conductor. The motion is nonrelativistic; the sphere has no excess...
  35. M

    Effect of electrical permittivity on the speed of light?

    Why does an increased electrical permittivity reduce the phase velocity of light in a medium? Furthermore, what interactions do we see on an atomic level? I am aware of the equation that defines the speed of light in terms of the electrical permittivity and magnetic permeability, but I do not...
  36. R

    B How does force transfer through an object microscopically?

    I heard that you can never really touch anything. I also heard from an article that the reason why your butt doesn't fall through your chair is due to forces. Here is a short excerpt: "Cracking like lightning through the void, all the specks of electrons and the specks of nuclei are constantly...
  37. dextercioby

    U(1) invariance of classical electromagnetism

    This is an interesting question that popped through my mind. Some of us should know what is meant by „gauge transformations”, „gauge invariance/symmetry” and are used to seeing these terms whenever lectures on quantum field theory are read. But the electromagnetic field in vacuum (described in a...
  38. E

    Programs Vector calculus and E&M physics as a engineering major?

    I am an engineering major at Los Angeles Pierce community college. I have been for the last years working 40 hours a week in order to sustain and put myself through community college. After I transfer, I don't plan on working. Now, each semester due to my work schedule and life happening, I can...
  39. C

    A Question about derivatives of complex fields

    https://arxiv.org/pdf/1705.07188.pdf Equation 5 in this paper states that $$\frac{\partial F}{\partial p_i} = 2Re\left\lbrace\frac{\partial F}{\partial x}\frac{\partial x}{\partial p_i}\right\rbrace$$ Here, p_i stands for the i'th element of a vector of 'design parameters' \mathbf{p}. These...
  40. D

    Some formulas (electromagnetism)

    dH=dl/dt dB=dl/dx dE/dB=-dx/dt dD=dl/dx dH/dD=-dx/dt H - magnetic field strength; B - magnetic flux density; E - irradiance; D - electric displacement field. Please, have a look at these equations. Are they correct? I can't grasp the idea. Any explanations? I need some intuitive understanding...
  41. J

    Electromagnetic field disturbance if radiation disappears

    Hi everyone! I've been reading about these topics (Feynman lectures and more on the internet and some books) but I still have a doubt, maybe because I haven't understood the whole of it. This is my doubt: Think of an imaginary situation in which we have an accelerating charge. The...
  42. bachir1994

    I Electromagnetism and relativity

    Hello everyone, I read on WIKIPEDIA, that: In 1953 Einstein wrote to the Cleveland Society of Physics on the occasion of the commemoration of Michelson-Morley's experience that "what brought me more and less Directly to the theory of special relativity was the conviction that the electromotive...
  43. J

    Electromagnetism - Linear charge

    Homework Statement q=1.602*10^-19 point 1 L=1mm=r1 v=1.1*10^6 at point 2 F=1.44*10^-12 at point 1 Homework Equations E=(1/4πε)*(q/r) ΔV=∫E*dr=(1/4πε)*q∫(1/r)=(1/4πε)*q*ln (r2/r1) ΔU=ΔK=mv^2/2 ΔK=mv^2/2=ΔV*q=q*(1/4πε)*Q*(ln(r2/r1))...
  44. J

    Electromagnetism - The distance from point a to point b

    Homework Statement So I want to know the distance to 2. The proton is at v=0 at the 1. We know that: q=1.602*10^-19 point 1 L=1mm v=1.1*10^6 at point 2 F=1.44*10^-12 at point 1 Homework Equations [/B] E=(1/4πε)*(q/r2) ΔV=∫E*dr=(1/4πε)*q∫(1/r2)=(1/4πε)*q*(1/r2-1/r1) ΔU=ΔK=mv2/2...
  45. M

    Physics 12: Acceleration of Proton in B-Field

    Homework Statement [/B] A proton is accelerated from rest at the positive plate of two charged parallel plates with a potential difference of 2000 v. After leaving the plates through a small hole in the negative plate, it enters a uniform magnetic field of 0.50 T in a direction perpendicular to...
  46. B

    Field between Parallel Plates in a Capacitor

    I guess it is a trivial fact that field must be ##(\phi_1 - \phi_2)/s## but I don't get how ? is there a derivation for it ?
  47. D

    Permanent Magnets: Exploring the Source of Energy

    First off, I am new here, so please don't tear me apart too hard if I miss or misinterpret something, I'll cotton on eventually :D As I understand it, when a permanent magnet repels an oppositely charged object, such as another oppositely charged permanent magnet, no energy is technically being...
  48. M

    Magnetic Field Computation from Thick Rectangular Conductor

    Hello, and thanks in advance for taking a look at my question. Generally, I am trying to make a railgun force model. Since railguns depend on the magnetic field created around the rails (and the resulting Lorentz force) I need to model the magnetic field created by the current that flows...
  49. AHashemi

    Magnetic levitated electric wire

    Hi I'm thinking about making an instrument to show the force on a wire carrying electric current for students in lab. A normal wire which levitates from ground after it has current flowing in it. We have the following equations F = ILBsin(a) W = ALg 'A' being the mass of unit length of the...
  50. The black vegetable

    Electromagnetism –revising with past exam papers

    Homework Statement trying to do question C Homework Equations I know my answer to C cannot be right because it's worth six marks, any help or tips would be greatly appreciated. :) The Attempt at a Solution
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