Magnetism and electromagnetism - AQA SynergyMagnetic fields
Magnetism is due to the magnetic fields around magnets. The fields can be investigated by looking at the effects of the forces they exert on other magnets and magnetic materials.
A magnetic fieldArea surrounding a magnet that can exert a force on magnetic materials. is the region around a magnetAn object capable of exerting a magnetic force. where a force acts on another magnet or on a magnetic material. Iron, steel, cobalt and nickel are all magnetic materials and would feel force from a nearby magnet.
Detecting magnetic fields
A magnetic field is invisible, but it can be detected using a magnetic compass. A compass contains a small bar magnet on a pivot so that it can rotate. The compass needle points in the direction of the Earth's magnetic field, or the magnetic field of a magnet.
Magnetic fields can be mapped out using small plotting compassSmall magnetic compass used to detect magnetic fields.:
place the plotting compass near the magnet on a piece of paper
mark the direction the compass needle points
move the plotting compass to many different positions in the magnetic field, marking the needle direction each time
join the points to show the field lines
The needle of a plotting compass points to the south poleIn a magnet, the end that is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south pole. of the magnet.
The behaviour of a compass shows that the Earth has a magnetic field. The Earth's core, which is made from iron and nickel, produces this magnetic field.
Drawing a magnetic field
Figure caption,
Magnetic field lines around a bar magnet
The diagram shows these key features:
the magnetic field lineAn imaginary line which indicates the direction of force caused by a magnet. An arrow on the line shows the force direction on a magnetic north pole, so points from north to south. never cross each other
the closer the lines, the stronger the magnetic field (so the magnetic field from a bar magnet is strongest closest to the poles)
the lines have arrowheads to show the direction of the force exerted by a magnetic north poleIn a magnet, the end that is attracted to the Earth's magnetic north pole.
the arrowheads point from the north pole of the magnet to its south pole