مقناطيس

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پني تي رکيل لوھھ جون ذريون بار مقناطيس جي مقنائي اچ ڏيکارين ٿيون.
پني تي رکيل لوھھ جون ذريون بار مقناطيس جي مقنائي اچ ڏيکارين ٿيون.

A magnet is an object that has a magnetic field. The word magnet comes from the Greek "magnítis líthos" (μαγνήτης λίθος), which means "magnesian stone". Magnesia was an area in Ancient Greece, in present-day Manisa, Turkey where deposits of magnetite have been discovered since antiquity.

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[edit] تعارف

In the modern sense, a magnet is a material that has a magnetic field. It can be in the form of a permanent magnet or an electromagnet. Permanent magnets do not rely upon outside influences to generate their field. Electromagnets rely upon electric current to generate a magnetic field - when the current increases, so does the field. Magnets are attracted to or repelled by other things. Something that is strongly attracted to a magnet is said to have a high permeability. Iron and steel are two examples of materials with very high permeability, and they are strongly attracted to magnets. Liquid oxygen is an example of something with a low permeability, and it is only weakly attracted to a magnetic field. Water has such a low permeability that it is actually repelled by magnetic fields. Everything has a measurable permeability: people, gases and even the vacuum of outer space.

The SI unit of magnetic field strength is the tesla, and the SI unit of total magnetic flux is the weber. 1 weber = 1 tesla flowing through 1 square meter, and is a very large amount of magnetic flux.

[edit] مقنايت جو لوڪل ريجن

[edit] مستقل يا جٽادار مقناطيس

All normal matter is composed of particles, such as the major fermions and bosons such as protons, neutrons, and electrons, and all of these particles have the fundamental property of quantum mechanical spin. Spin gives each one of these particles an associated magnetic field. Because of this, and the fact that the average microscopic piece of matter contains huge numbers of these particles, it would be expected that all matter would be magnetic. Everyday experience shows that this is not the case. Even antimatter would have magnetic characteristics.

Within each atom and molecule, the spin of each of these particles is highly ordered as a result of the Pauli Exclusion Principle. However, there is no long range ordering of these spins between atoms and molecules. Without long range ordering, there is no net magnetic field because the magnetic moment of each one of the particles is cancelled by the magnetic moment of other particles.

Permanent magnets are special in that long range ordering does exist. The highest degree of ordering exists within magnetic domains. These domains can be likened to microscopic neighbourhoods in which there is a strong reinforcing interaction between particles, and as a result, a great deal of order. The greater the degree of ordering within and between domains, the greater the resulting field will be.

Long range ordering (and the resulting strong net magnetic field) is one of the hallmarks of a ferromagnetic material.

[edit] مقنايت جي برقياتي پيداوار

Electrons play the primary role in generating a magnetic field. Within an atom, electrons can exist either individually or in pairs within any given orbital. When they are paired, the individuals in that pair always have opposite spin — one up, one down. The fact that the spins have opposite orientation means that the two cancel one another. If all electrons are paired, no net magnetic field will be generated.

In some atoms, there are electrons that are unpaired. All magnets have unpaired electrons, but not all atoms with unpaired electrons are ferromagnetic. In order for the material to become ferromagnetic, not only must there be unpaired electrons present, but those unpaired electrons must interact with one another over long ranges such that they are all oriented in the same way. The specific electron configuration of the atoms (as well as the distance between atoms) is what leads to this long range ordering. The electrons find that they can exist in a lower energy state if they all have the same orientation.

[edit] برق مقناطيس

Quadrupole ("four-pole") electromagnets, focus particle beams in a particle accelerator. There are four steel pole tips, two opposing magnetic north poles and two opposing magnetic south poles. The steel is magnetized by a large electric current that flows in the coils of tubing wrapped around the poles.

An electromagnet, in its simplest form, is a wire that has been coiled into one or more loops. This coil is known as a solenoid. When electric current flows along the coil, a magnetic field is generated around the coil. The orientation of this field can be determined via the right hand rule. The strength of the field is influenced by several factors. The number of loops determines the surface area of interaction, the amount of current determines the amount of activity, and the material in the core determines electrical resistance. The more loops of wire and the greater the current, the stronger the field will be.

If the coil of wire is empty in the center, it will tend to generate a very weak field. Different ferromagnetic or paramagnetic items can be placed in the center of the core with the effect of magnifying the magnetic field, for example an iron nail. In addition, soft iron is commonly used for this purpose. The addition of these types of materials can result in a several hundred- to thousand-fold increase of field strength.

At long distances, magnetic fields obey an inverse square law. This means that the field strength is inversely proportional to the distance from the magnet. If the face of an electromagnet is machined to a high degree of precision, it will be able to get much closer to the surface it is trying to attract. Take the case of an electromagnet trying to attract an extremely smooth, flat metal plate. If the electromagnet's face is extremely smooth and flat as well, there will be many more points of contact with the plate, and so the magnetic circuit will have less resistance to the magnetic field.

Electromagnets find uses in many places, ranging from particle accelerators, to junkyard cranes, to magnetic resonance imaging machines.

If an electromagnet is strong enough, the magnetic force between neighbouring loops of wire can cause the electromagnet to be crushed by its own magnetic field.

[edit] مقنائي مٽيريئلس جون خصوصيتون

[edit] جٽادار مقناطيس ۽ ٻھ قطب

All magnets have at least two poles: that is, all magnets have at least one north pole and at least one south pole. The poles are not a pair of things on or inside the magnet. They are a concept used to discuss and describe magnets. In the image at the top of this page, the poles look like specific locations, because the highest surface intensity of the field occurs at the poles), but this does not mean that they are specific locations.

To understand the concept of pole, it can be imagined that a row of people who are all facing the same direction and standing in line. While there is a "face" end of the line and a "back" end of the line, there is no one place where all of the faces are and all of the backs are. The person at the front of the face end has a back; and the person at the back end has a face. If the line is divided into two shorter lines, each one of the shorter lines still has a face end and a back end. Even if the line is pulled completely apart so that there are just individuals standing around, each one of the individuals still has a face and a back. This can continue without end.

The same holds true with magnets. There is not one place where all of the north or south poles are. If a magnet is divided in two, two magnets will result--and both magnets will have a north and a south pole. Those smaller magnets can then be divided, and all of the resulting pieces will have both a north and south pole. In most instances, if the material continues to be broken into smaller and smaller pieces there will be a point where the pieces are too small to retain a net magnetic field. They won't become individual north or south poles though; instead, they will just lose the ability to maintain a net field. Some materials, however, can be divided down to the molecular level and still maintain a net field with both a north and a south pole. There are theories involving the possibility of north and south magnetic monopoles, but no magnetic monopole has ever been found.

[edit] قطبن جو اتر - ڏکڻ تعين ۽ ڌرتيءَ جِي مقنائي اَچَ

A standard naming system for the poles of magnets is important. Historically, the terms north and south reflect awareness of the relationship between magnets and the earth's magnetic field. A freely suspended magnet will eventually orient itself north-to-south, because of its attraction to the north and south magnetic poles of the earth. The end of a magnet that points toward the Earth's geographic North Pole is labeled as the north pole of the magnet; correspondingly, the end that points south is the south pole of the magnet.

The Earth's current geographic north is thus actually its magnetic south. Confounding the situation further, it is known that the Earth's magnetic field has reversed itself in the past, so this system of naming is likely to be backward at some time in the future.

Fortunately, by using an electromagnet and the right hand rule, the orientation of the field of a magnet can be defined without reference to the Earth's geomagnetic field.

To avoid the confusion between geographic and magnetic north and south poles, the terms positive and negative are sometimes used for the poles of a magnet. The positive pole is that which seeks geographical north.

[edit] مقناطيسن جو عام استعمال

  • Magnetic recording media: Common VHS tapes contain a reel of magnetic tape. The information that makes up the video and sound is encoded on the magnetic coating on the tape. This is why magnets will destroy the information in these types of tapes. Common audio cassettes also rely on magnetic tape. Similarly, in computers, floppy disks and hard disks record data on a thin magnetic coating.
  • Credit, debit, and ATM cards: All of these cards have a magnetic strip on one of their sides. This strip contains the necessary information to contact an individuals financial institution and connect with their account(s).
  • Common televisions and computer monitors: The vast majority of TV's and computer screens rely in part on an electromagnet to generate an image--see the article on cathode ray tubes for more information. Plasma screens and LCDs rely on different technology entirely.
  • Loudspeakers and microphones: Loudspeakers actually rely on a combination of a permanent magnet and an electromagnet. A speaker is fundamentally a device to convert electric energy (the signal) into mechanical energy (the sound). The electromagnet carries the signal, which generates a changing magnetic field that pushes and pulls on the field generated by the permanent magnet. This pushing and pulling moves the cone, which creates sound. Not all speakers rely on this technology, but the vast majority do. Standard microphones are based upon the same concept, but run in reverse. A microphone has a cone or membrane attached to a coil of wire. The coil rests inside a specially shaped magnet. When sound vibrates the membrane, the coil is vibrated as well. As the coil moves through the magnetic field, a voltage is generated in the coil (see Lenz's Law). This voltage in the wire is now an electric signal that is representative of the original sound.
  • Electric motors and generators: Some electric motors (much like loudspeakers) rely upon a combination of an electromagnet and a permanent magnet, and much like loudspeakers, they convert electric energy into mechanical energy. A generator is the reverse: it converts mechanical energy into electric energy.
  • Transformers: Transformers are devices that transfer electric energy between two devices that are electrically disconnected via magnetic coupling.
  • Chucks: Chucks are used in the metalworking field to hold objects. If these objects can be held securely with a magnet then a permanent or electromagnetic chuck may be used. Magnets are also used in other types of fastening devices, such as the magnetic base, the magnetic clamp and the refrigerator magnet.

[edit] مٽيريئلس جي مقناڪاري

Ferromagnetic materials can be magnetised in the following ways:

  • Placing the item in an external magnetic field will result in the item retaining some of the magnetism on removal. Vibration has been shown to increase the effect. Ferrous materials aligned with the earth's magnetic field and which are subject to vibration (eg frame of a conveyor) have been shown to acquire significant residual magnetism.
  • Placing the item in a solenoid with a direct current passing through it.
  • Stroking - An existing magnet is moved from one end of the item to the other repeatedly in the same direction.
  • Placing a steel bar in a magnetic field, then heating it to a high temperature and then finally hammering it as it cools. This can be done by laying the magnet in a North-South direction in the Earth's magnetic field. However, the magnet is not very strong but permanent.

[edit] مٽيريئلس کي نس مقنائڻ

Permanent magnets can be demagnetized in the following ways:

  • Heating a magnet past its Curie point will destroy the long range ordering.
  • Contact through stroking one magnet with another in random fashion will demagnetize the magnet being stroked, in some cases; some materials have a very high coercive field and cannot be demagnetized with other permanent magnets.
  • Hammering or jarring will destroy the long range ordering within the magnet.
  • A magnet being placed in a solenoid which has an alternating current being passed through it will have its long range ordering disrupted, in much the same way that direct current can cause ordering.

In an electromagnet, ceasing the flow of current will eliminate the magnetic field. However, a slight field may remain in the core material as a result of hysteresis.

[edit] جٽادار مقناطيسن جا قسمَ

  • Rare Earth or Neodymium Magnets, which are some of the most powerful permanent magnets
  • Samarium-Cobalt Magnets
  • Ceramic Magnets
  • Plastic Magnets
  • Alnico Magnets

[edit] قمنائي زور

Magnetized items interact with other items in very specific ways.

[edit] مقناطيس ۽ ٻيا مقناطيس

If a magnet is brought close enough to another magnet, their fields will begin to interact in the following ways:

  • If each magnets north pole is brought together, the magnets will repel one another (like poles repel)
  • If the north pole of one magnet is brought to the south pole of the other magnet (or vice versa), the magnets will attract one another (opposite poles attract)

[edit] Magnets and ferromagnetic materials

If a magnet is brought close enough to a ferromagnetic material (that is not magnetized itself), the magnet will strongly attract the ferromagnetic material regardless of orientation. Both the north and south pole of the magnet will attract the other item with equal strength.

[edit] Magnets and diamagnetic materials

By definition, diamagnetic materials weakly repel a magnetic field. This occurs regardless of the north/south orientation field.

[edit] مقناطيس ۽ نيم مقناطيسي مٽيريئلس

By definition, paramagnetic materials are weakly attracted to a magnetic field. This occurs regardless of the north/south orientation of the field.

[edit] Calculating the magnetic force

Calculating the attractive or repulsive force between two magnets is, in the general case, an extremely complex operation, as it depends on the shape, magnetization, orientation and separation of the magnets.

[edit] ٻن قطبن درميان زور

The force between two magnetic monopoles is as follows:

F={{m_1m_2}\over{\mu r^2}} [1]

where

F is force (SI unit: newton)
m is pole strength (SI unit: weber)
μ is the permeability of the intervening medium (SI unit: tesla meter per ampere)
r is the separation (SI unit: meter).

Since magnetic monopoles are only a theoretical construction, this equation does not describe a physically realisable arrangement. It is stated here because it is the simplest possible calculation of magnetic forces. In reality, one of the more complex formulae given below will be more useful.

[edit] Force between two very close attracting surfaces

F=\frac{AB^2}{2\mu_0} [2]

where

A is the area of each surface, in mTemplate:Sup, and
B is the flux density between them, in teslas

[edit] Force between two bar magnets

The force between two identical cylindrical bar magnets placed end-to-end is given by:

F=\left[\frac {B_0^2 A^2 \left( L^2+R^2 \right)} {\pi\mu_0L^2}\right] \left[{\frac 1 {x^2}} + {\frac 1 {(x+2L)^2}} - {\frac 2 {(x+L)^2}} \right] [3]

where

B0 is the flux density at each pole, in T,
A is the area of each pole, in mTemplate:Sup,
L is the length of each magnet, in m,
R is the radius of each magnet, in m, and
x is the separation between the two magnets, in m

[edit] پڻ ڏسندا

  • electromagnet
  • electromagnetism
  • electromagnetic field
  • neodymium magnet
  • diamagnetism
  • magnetic dipole
  • magnetic monopole
  • magnetism
  • molecular magnet
  • paramagnetism
  • single-molecule magnet

[edit] Online references

[edit] Printed references

  • "positive pole n." The Concise Oxford English Dictionary. Ed. Catherine Soanes and Angus Stevenson. Oxford University Press, 2004. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press.

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