ELECTROMAGNETISM

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Table of Contents
1
Unit 2: Electricity and Energy
Resources
MODULE 1: Magnetism and Its Uses

1.1: Magnetism

1.2: Electricity and Magnetism

1.3: Producing Electric Current


Magnetism
1.1
Magnets
• More than 2,000 years ago Greeks discovered
deposits of a mineral that was a natural
magnet.
• The mineral is
now called
magnetite.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnets
• In the twelfth century Chinese sailors used
magnetite to make compasses that improved
navigation.
• Today, the word
magnetism refers
to the properties
and interactions of
magnets.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Force
• Depending on which ends of the magnets
are close together, the magnets either repel
or attract each other.
• The strength of the force between two
magnets increases as magnets move closer
together and decreases as the magnets move
farther apart.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Field
• A magnet is surrounded
by a magnetic field. A
magnetic field exerts a
force on other magnets
and objects made of
magnetic materials.
• The magnetic field is
strongest close to the
magnet and weaker far
away.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Field
• The magnetic field can
be represented by lines
of force, or magnetic
field lines.
• A magnetic field also has
a direction. The direction
of the magnetic field
around a bar magnet is
shown by the arrows.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Poles
• Magnetic poles are
where the magnetic
force exerted by the
magnet is strongest.
• All magnets have a north Click image to play movie
pole and a south pole.
• For a bar magnet, the north and south poles
are at the opposite ends.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Poles
• The two ends of a horseshoe-shaped magnet
are the north and south poles.
• A magnet shaped like
a disk has opposite
poles on the top and
bottom of the disk.
• Magnetic field lines
always connect the
north pole and the
south pole of a magnet.
Magnetism
1.1
How Magnets Interact
• Two magnets can either attract or repel each
other.
• Two north poles or two south poles of two
magnets repel each other. However, north
poles and south poles always attract each
other.
• When two magnets are brought close to each
other, their magnetic fields combine to
produce a new magnetic field.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Field Direction
• When a compass is brought near a bar
magnet, the compass needle rotates.
• The force exerted on the compass needle by
the magnetic field causes the needle to
rotate.
• The compass needle rotates until it lines up
with the magnetic field lines.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Field Direction
• The north pole of a compass points in the
direction of the magnetic field.
• This direction is
always away from a
north magnetic pole
and toward a south
magnetic pole.
Magnetism
1.1
Earth’s Magnetic Field
• A compass can help determine direction
because the north pole of the compass needle
points north.
• This is because
Earth acts like a
giant bar magnet
and is surrounded
by a magnetic
field that extends
into space.
Magnetism
1.1
Earth’s Magnetic Field
• Just as with a
bar magnet, the
compass
needle aligns
with Earth’s
magnetic field
lines.
Magnetism
1.1
Earth’s Magnetic Poles
• Currently, Earth’s south magnetic pole is
located in northern Canada about 1,500 km
from the geographic north pole.
• Earth’s magnetic poles move slowly with
time.
• Sometimes Earth’s magnetic poles switch
places so that Earth’s south magnetic pole is
the southern hemisphere near the geographic
south pole.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Materials
• You might have noticed that a magnet will
not attract all metal objects.
• Only a few metals, such as iron, cobalt, or
nickel, are attracted to magnets or can be
made into permanent magnets.

• What makes these elements magnetic?


Remember that every atom contains
electrons.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic Materials
• In the atoms of most elements, the magnetic
properties of the electrons cancel out.

• But in the atoms of iron, cobalt, and nickel,


these magnetic properties don’t cancel out.

• Even though these atoms have their own


magnetic fields, objects made from these
metals are not always magnets.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic DomainsA Model
for Magnetism
• Groups of atoms with aligned magnetic poles
are called magnetic domains.
Magnetism
1.1
Magnetic DomainsA Model
for Magnetism
• Each domain contains an enormous number
of atoms, yet the domains are too small to be
seen with the unaided eye.

• Because the magnetic poles of the individual


atoms in a domain are aligned, the domain
itself behaves like a magnet with a north pole
and a south pole.
Magnetism
1.1
Lining Up Domains
• Even though each domain behaves like a
magnet, the poles of the domains are
arranged randomly and point in different
directions.
• As a result the
magnetic fields
from all the
domains cancel
each other out.
Magnetism
1.1
Lining Up Domains
• If you place a magnet against the same nail,
the atoms in the domains orient themselves in
the direction of the nearby magnetic field.

• The like poles of the


domains point in the
same direction and no
longer cancel each
other out.
Magnetism
1.1
Lining Up Domains
• The nail itself now acts as a magnet.
• The nail is only
a temporary
magnet.
• Paper clips and other
objects containing
iron also can become
temporary magnets. Click image to play movie
Magnetism
1.1
Permanent Magnets
• A permanent magnet can be made by placing
a magnetic material, such as iron, in a strong
magnetic field.
• The strong magnetic field causes the
magnetic domains in the material to line up.
• The magnetic fields of these aligned domains
add together and create a strong magnetic
field inside the material.
Magnetism
1.1
Permanent Magnets
• This field prevents the constant motion of
the atoms from bumping the domains out
of alignment. The material is then a
permanent magnet.
• If the permanent magnet is heated enough,
its atoms may be moving fast enough to
jostle the domains out of alignment.
• Then the permanent magnet loses its
magnetic field and is no longer a magnet.
Magnetism
1.1
Can a pole be isolated?
• Look at the domain model of the broken
magnet.
• Recall that even
individual atoms of
magnetic materials
act as tiny magnets.
Magnetism
1.1
Can a pole be isolated?
• Because every magnet
is made of many
aligned smaller
magnets, even the
smallest pieces have
both a north pole and
a south pole.
Section Check
1.1

Question 1
What is the difference between a magnetic
field and a magnetic pole?
Section Check
1.1

Answer
A magnetic field is the area surrounding a
magnet that exerts a force on other magnets
and magnetic materials. A magnetic pole is
the region on a magnet where the magnetic
force is strongest.
Section Check
1.1

Question 2
How do unlike magnetic poles interact?

Answer
Two magnets can either attract or repel each
other. Like magnetic poles repel each other
and unlike poles attract each other.
Section Check
1.1

Question 3
Groups of atoms with aligned magnetic
poles are called __________.

A. magnetic charges
B. magnetic domains
C. magnetic fields
D. magnetic materials
Section Check
1.1

Answer
The answer is B, magnetic domains.
Magnetic materials contain magnetic
domains.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electric Current and Magnetism

• In 1820, Han Christian Oersted, a Danish


physics teacher, found that electricity and
magnetism are related.

• Oersted hypothesized that the electric current


must produce a magnetic field around the
wire, and the direction of the field changes
with the direction of the current.
Electricity and Magnetism
8.2
Moving Charges and Magnetic
Fields
• It is now known that moving charges, like
those in an electric current, produce magnetic
fields.
• Around a
current-
carrying wire
the magnetic
field lines
form circles.
Electricity and Magnetism
8.2
Moving Charges and Magnetic
Fields
• The direction of the magnetic field around the
wire reverses when the direction of the current
in the wire reverses.
• As the current
in the wire
increases the
strength of the
magnetic field
increases.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electromagnets
• An electromagnet is a temporary magnet
made by wrapping a wire coil carrying a
current around an iron core.
• When a current flows
through a wire loop,
the magnetic field
inside the loop is
stronger than the field
around a straight wire.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electromagnets
• A single wire wrapped into a cylindrical
wire coil is called a solenoid.
• The magnetic
field inside a
solenoid is
stronger than
the field in a
single loop.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electromagnets
• If the solenoid is wrapped around an iron
core, an electromagnet is formed.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electromagnets
• The solenoid’s magnetic field magnetizes the
iron core. As a result, the field inside the
solenoid with the iron core can be more than
1,000 times greater than the field inside the
solenoid without the iron core.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Properties of Electromagnets
• Electromagnets are temporary magnets
because the magnetic field is present only
when current is flowing in the solenoid.

• The strength of the magnetic field can be


increased by adding more turns of wire to the
solenoid or by increasing the current passing
through the wire.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Properties of Electromagnets
• One end of the electromagnet is a north pole
and the other end is a south pole.
• If placed in a magnetic field, an
electromagnet will align itself along the
magnetic field lines, just as a compass needle
will.
• An electromagnet also will attract magnetic
materials and be attracted or repelled by other
magnets.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Using Electromagnets to Make
Sound
• How does musical information stored on
a CD become sound you can hear?

• The sound is produced by a loudspeaker


that contains an electromagnet connected to
a flexible speaker cone that is usually made
from paper, plastic, or metal.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Using Electromagnets to Make
Sound
• The
electromagnet
changes
electrical energy
to mechanical
energy that
vibrates the
speaker cone to
produce sound.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making an Electromagnet Rotate
• The forces exerted on an electromagnet by
another magnet can be used to make the
electromagnet rotate.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making an Electromagnet Rotate

• One way to change the forces that make the


electromagnet rotate is to change the current
in the electromagnet.

• Increasing the current increases the strength


of the forces between the two magnets.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Galvanometers
• How does a change in the amount of
gasoline in a tank or the water temperature
in the engine make a needle move in a gauge
on the dashboard?
• These gauges are galvanometers, which are
devices that use an electromagnet to
measure electric current.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Using Galvanometers
• In a galvanometer, the electromagnet is
connected to a small spring.
• Then the
electromagnet
rotates until the
force exerted by
the spring is
balanced by the
magnetic forces on
the electromagnet.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Using Galvanometers
• Changing the current in the electromagnet
causes the needle to rotate to different
positions on the scale.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electric Motors
• A fan uses an electric motor, which is a
device that changes electrical energy into
mechanical energy.
• The motor in a fan turns the
fan blades, moving air past
your skin to make you feel
cooler.
• Almost every appliance in
which something moves
contains an electric motor.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
A Simple Electric Motor
• The main parts of a simple electric motor
include a wire coil, a permanent magnet,
and a source of electric current, such as a
battery.

• The battery produces the current that makes


the coil an electromagnet.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
A Simple Electric Motor
• A simple electric motor also includes
components called brushes and a commutator.
• The brushes are conducting pads connected
to the battery.
• The brushes make contact with the
commutator, which is a conducting metal ring
that is split.
• The brushes and the commutator form a
closed electric circuit between the battery
and the coil.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 1. When a current flows in the coil, the
magnetic forces between the permanent
magnet and the coil cause the coil to rotate.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 2. In this position, the brushes are not in
contact with the commutator and no current
flows in the coil.

• The inertia of
the coil keeps it
rotating.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 3. The commutator reverses the
direction of the current in the coil.
• This flips the
north and south
poles of the
magnetic field
around the coil.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 4. The coil rotates until its poles are
opposite the poles of the permanent magnet.
• The
commutator
reverses the
current, and
the coil keeps
rotating.
Section Check
1.2

Question 1
Who correctly hypothesized that electric
current produces a magnetic field?
A. Neils Bohr
B. Heinrich Hertz
C. Hans Christian Oersted
D. Max Planck
Section Check
1.2

Answer
The answer is C. In 1820, Oersted
hypothesized that electric current produces
a magnetic field and that the direction of
the field changes with the direction of the
current.
Section Check
1.2

Question 2
How can you make an electromagnet?

Answer
An electromagnet is a temporary magnet
made by wrapping a wire coil carrying a
current around an iron core.
Section Check
1.2

Question 3
Which of the following is a device that uses
an electromagnet to measure current?

A. electric motor
B. galvanometer
C. generator
D. transformer
Section Check
1.2

Answer
The answer is B. In a galvanometer, the
electromagnet is connected to a small spring.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
From Mechanical to Electrical
Energy
• Working independently in 1831, Michael
Faraday in Britain and Joseph Henry in the
United States both found that moving a loop
of wire through a magnetic field caused an
electric current to flow in the wire.
• They also found that moving a magnet
through a loop of wire produces a current.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
From Mechanical to Electrical
Energy
• The magnet and wire loop must be moving
relative to each other for an electric current
to be produced.
• This causes the magnetic field inside the
loop to change with time.
• The generation of a current by a changing
magnetic field is electromagnetic
induction.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generators
• A generator uses electromagnetic induction
to transform mechanical energy into
electrical energy.
• An example of a simple
generator is shown. In
this type of generator, a
current is produced in the
coil as the coil rotates
between the poles of a
permanent magnet.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Switching Direction
• In a generator, as the coil keeps rotating,
the current that is produced periodically
changes direction.
• The direction
of the current
in the coil
changes twice
with each
revolution.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Switching Direction
• The frequency with which the current
changes direction can be controlled by
regulating the rotation rate of the generator.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Using Electric Generators
• The type of generator shown is used in a
car, where it is called an alternator.
• The alternator
provides electrical
energy to operate
lights and other
accessories.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Electrical energy comes from a power plant
with huge generators.
• The coils in these
generators have
many coils of
wire wrapped
around huge iron
cores.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• The rotating magnets are connected to a
turbine (TUR bine)a large wheel that
rotates when pushed by water, wind, or
steam.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Some power plants first produce thermal
energy by burning fossil fuels or using the
heat produced by nuclear reactions.
• This thermal energy is used to heat water
and produce steam.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Thermal energy is then converted to
mechanical energy as the steam pushes
the turbine blades.
• The generator then changes the mechanical
energy of the rotating turbine into the
electrical energy you use.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• In some areas, fields
of windmills can be
used to capture the
mechanical energy
in wind to turn
generators.
• Other power plants use the mechanical
energy in falling water to drive the turbine.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Both generators and electric motors use
magnets to produce energy conversions
between electrical and mechanical energy.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Direct and Alternating Currents
• Because power outages sometimes occur,
some electrical devices use batteries as a
backup source of electrical energy.
• However, the
current produced
by a battery is
different than the
current from an
electric
generator.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Direct and Alternating Currents
• A battery produces a direct current.
• Direct current (DC) flows only in one
direction through a wire.
• When you plug your CD player or any other
appliance into a wall outlet, you are using
alternating current. Alternating current
(AC) reverses the direction of the current in
a regular pattern.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Electrical Energy
• When the electric energy is transmitted along
power lines, some of the electrical energy is
converted into heat due to the electrical
resistance of the wires.
• The electrical
resistance and heat
production increases
as the wires get
longer.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Electrical Energy
• One way to reduce the heat produced in a
power line is to transmit the electrical
energy at high voltages, typically around
150,000 V.
• Electrical energy at such high voltage cannot
enter your home safely, nor can it be used in
home appliances.
• A transformer is used to decrease the
voltage.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• A transformer is a device that increases or
decreases the voltage of an alternating
current.
• A transformer is
made of a primary
coil and a
secondary coil.
• These wire coils are
wrapped around the
same iron core.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• As an alternating current passes through the
primary coil, the coil’s magnetic field
magnetizes the iron core.
• The magnetic field
in the primary coil
changes direction
as the current in the
primary coil
changes direction.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• This produces a magnetic field in the iron
core that changes direction at the same
frequency.
• The changing magnetic field in the iron core
then induces an alternating current with the
same frequency in the secondary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• The changing magnetic field in the iron core
then induces an alternating current with the
same frequency in the secondary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers

• The voltage in the primary coil is the input


voltage and the voltage in the secondary coil
is the output voltage.

• The output voltage divided by the input


voltage equals the number of turns in the
secondary coil divided by the number of
turns in the primary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Step-Up Transformer
• A transformer that increases the voltage so
that the output voltage is greater than the
input voltage is a step-up transformer.
• In a step-up
transformer the
number of wire turns
on the secondary coil
is greater than the
number of turns on
the primary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Step-Down Transformer
• A transformer that decreases the voltage so
that the output voltage is less than the input
voltage is a step-down transformer.
• In a step-down
transformer the
number of wire turns
on the secondary
coil is less than the
number of turns on
the primary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Alternating Current
• Although step-up transformers and step-
down transformers change the voltage at
which electrical energy is transmitted, they
do not change the amount of electrical
energy transmitted.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Alternating Current
• This figure shows how step-up and step-down
transformers are used in transmitting electrical
energy from power plants to your home.
Section Check
1.3

Question 1
What is electromagnetic induction?

Answer
Electromagnetic induction is the generation
of a current by a changing magnetic field.
Section Check
1.3

Question 2
In a power plant, what is the function of the
turbine?
Section Check
1.3

Answer
The turbine is a large wheel that rotates
when pushed by water, wind or steam. The
plant’s generator changes the mechanical
energy of the rotating turbine into electrical
energy.
Section Check
1.3

Question 3
Which will increase the voltage of an
alternating current?

A. battery
B. generator
C. motor
D. transformer
Section Check
1.3

Answer
The answer is D. Transformers can also
decrease voltage, such as in a step-down
transformer.
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