answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The magnetic lines of force are not real, they are imaginary lines of force which we draw using a north pole. We can draw as many as we desire using a different starting point for our drawing of lines of force. (Of course, we say that we say that when the strength is more we draw the lines closer and when it is less, we draw them sparse, but it is still subjective, one can start at a different point and draw as many lines .how can we depend on the number of lines for the definition of flux? Is there no better definition? We can straight forward define it as perhaps which is less ambiguous.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

A magnetic field line can be thought of as consisting of lines of force. The forces of magnetic attraction and repulsion move along the lines of force.

These can be illustrated to form closed loops connecting the north and south poles of a magnet. Magnetic particles within these fields will tend to align in the same direction.

Another Answer

Magnetic field lines do not exist. They are imaginary. They were used by Sir Michael Faraday simply as a model to represent the behaviour of a magnetic field, and they provide us with a mental picture of the intensity of the magnetic field surrounding a magnet.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

Magnetic field lines show the direction of a magnetic field, and always go from the north to the south pole of the magnet. The field is stronger where the lines are closer together, and weaker where they are farther apart.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Magnetic Field Lines Show Magnitude and Direction of the Magnetic Field

When the lines of the magnetic field are close together the magnetic field is strong. In a region where the line density is high, one says that it has great intensity or strength. Technically, the density of lines is proportional to the magnitude of the field.

The direction that magnetic field lines are oriented provides the information on the direction of the field, with the convention that the lines have arrows drawn so the lines exit from the North pole of a permanent magnet, or equivalently, the arrows point in the direction that the North end of a compass needle would point if placed on the line.

More Information:

Magnetic field lines do not really exist any more than electric field lines exist, but both are extremely valuable representations of the strength and direction of magnet (or electric) fields. (Pictures of field lines are human creations to help understand fields, but the pictures of field lines that are correctly drawn do provide a faithful representation of the mathematical description of the field.)

When one says a magnetic field is "strong" one does not mean that it exerts a great force on another magnetic object. Strength of a magnetic field is defined in terms of torque, not force. Here is how.

Magnetic Vector Field Definition:

If a magnetic field exists at a certain point, then one characterizes it with a strength and direction. Indeed, one can do this at all points and know the magnitude and direction of the field at all points. Because vectors have magnitude and direction, we can associate a vector with the magnetic field at any point and that is why one says that a magnetic field is a vector field.

Magnetic Field Direction:

We define strength or magnitude of the field using the classic behavior that we see when we use a compass. The field exerts a torque on the compass needle to orient it. One end of the compass is marked "North" because, in the absence of any other field, the compass needle points to the "North" geographic pole of the Earth. Using this definition, when a compass is brought near a permanent magnet, the North end of the compass is said to point towards the South end of the magnet. (North poles attract South poles.) This pointing direction can be mapped out in the whole space around the bar magnet, orienting the compass not just flat or horizontal, but in all directions so as to determine which way the magnetic field points for all positions in the space around the permanent magnet. (This works equally well for electromagnets, but we describe it for the most simple situation.)

Magnetic Field Strength:

The field direction of at each point, as described above, is the direction the North end of the compass needle points when there is zero torque on the needle. If one turns the needle so it is perpendicular to the field direction, then the needle experiences maximum torque. That torque measures the strength or magnitude of the field. Thus, once you set the strength scale by assigning one value of the field strength for one particular compass, you can map out the field strength at all points with the same compass and you get the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field everywhere.

Magnetic Field Lines:

The above process produces a vector field meaning that at every point in space one could draw an small arrow with a magnitude and direction indicating the field. Such a drawing produces a picture a bunch of arrows in the space around the magnet representing the magnetic field. That is a perfectly good representation of a vector field.

One can also create a line representation of a vector field, magnetic, electric or other. For the magnet above, if you start at a point on the North end of the magnet and draw a line in the direction of the arrow, you immediately encounter another arrow. At the point of the new arrow you continue drawing the line in the direction of that arrow, until you get to the next arrow which gives the next direction and on and on. Basically, if you start at the North end of the magnet and draw a line in a direction that follows the directions of the arrows, that line ends up at the south end of the magnet. One can the pick a new starting position on the surface of the magnet and repeat the process. Doing this over and over produces a whole set of lines which eventually fills the entire space around the magnet.

The set of lines drawn are not the magnetic field lines. But, each of the lines drawn does follow a magnetic field line. That sounds odd, but to fairly represent the strength of the field, one has to have one more condition applied that determines how many lines are drawn. That condition is that the number of lines in any region of space is proportional to the strength of the field in that region. That requires some additional rule because the number or density of lines won't communicate the field strength if one just draws lines wherever one likes.

Density of Magnetic Field Lines:

When using field lines to represent a vector field (electric or magnetic or whatever) one needs the information of both magnitude and direction and the individual lines only give direction. So, convention is that the number of lines that you draw in any particular region of space is proportional to the strength (magnitude) of the field in that region. That is hard to do. Fortunately, magnetic field lines have a special property that makes this easier.

Magnetic field lines never begin or end.

The lines in a picture of a bar magnet makes it look like lines exit the North end and enter the South end and they do, but they keep going through the interior and come out the opposite end forming closed loops. Usually the part of the loops inside the magnet are not drawn, but they exist. It is clearer for electromagnets where the inside is visible in the drawing.

Drawing Lines:

The technical aspects of drawing the lines is too tricky to explain in detail, but here is a simple and correct approach.

First, decide how many lines are to be drawn. More is better, but let us suppose 100 for now. That means that all 100 must come out from the parts of the magnet deemed to be North and into the parts identified as South. That includes the ends and the sides and all regions of the surface where lines may go in or out. Draw more lines in the region where strength of the field at the surface is high and fewer out of regions where the strength is low. You have arranged the lines with the right density when putting your imaginary compass into a region with some density of lines will produce a maximum torque corresponding to the field strength. This all sounds a lot easier than it is.
There is no definition of "magnetic field lines", but this is the definition of Magnetic Field: a region around a magnetic material or a moving electric charge within which the force of magnetism acts.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

A magnetic line of force may be defined as the curve the tangent to which at any point gives the direction of the magnetic field at that point. It may also be defined as the path along which a unit north pole would tend to move if free to do so.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

Magnetic lines of force are the lines of force flowing from one pole of a magnet to the other. Magnetic lines of force flow from the north pole of a magnet to the south pole.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

magnetic lines of force is force of magnet towards magnetic field.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

flux lines

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is a definition of magnetic field lines?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What are the lines called that map out the magnetic field around magnetic?

They are called the magnetic field lines.


Where do magnetic field lines cross?

Magnetic field lines don't cross.


A magnetic field is described by magnetic lines of?

Lines of Force


What type of magnetic field lines represent uniform magnetic field?

straight parallel lines


What are the lines called that the map out the magnetic field around a magnet?

They are called the magnetic field lines.


A current in a long straight wire produces a magnetic field. These magnetic field lines?

The magnetic field lines are arranged circularly around the wire.


What does the relative density of lines of a magnetic field tell us about the strength of the field?

The closer the lines the stronger the magnetic field.


What is a magnetic field made up of?

Magnetic field is made up of magnetic lines.


Where is the magnetic force the greatest on a magnet?

The magnetic force of a magnet is strongest at its poles. This is because the field lines of the magnetic field are most concentrated at the poles where they enter and leave the magnet. At the poles the magnetic field is strongest and the force is the greatest. The north pole is where the magnetic field lines enter the magnet. The south pole is where the magnetic field lines leave the magnet. The magnetic field lines are most concentrated at the poles. The magnetic force is greatest at the poles.


Do magnetic field lines close together indicate a weaker magnetic field?

no they are not


How could straight copper wire produce magnetic field lines?

The copper by itself will do nothing of the sort. It will be surrounded by magnetic field lines if a current flows through it. It is the current that produces the magnetic field lines.


What is the direction of magnetic filed lines?

The direction of magnetic field lines are from north to south