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INTRODUCTION
Electromagnetism is a science of
charge and of the forces and fields associated with charge. Electricity and
magnetism are two aspects of electromagnetism.
Electricity and magnetism were long thought to be separate forces. It was
not until the 19th century that they were finally treated as interrelated
phenomena. In 1905 Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity
established beyond a doubt that both are aspects of one common phenomenon.
At a practical level, however, electric and magnetic forces behave quite
differently and are described by different equations. Electric forces are
produced by electric charges either at rest or in motion. Magnetic forces,
on the other hand, are produced only by moving charges and act solely on
charges in motion.
Electric phenomena occur even in
neutral matter because the forces act on the individual charged
constituents. The electric force, in particular, is responsible for most of
the physical and chemical properties of atoms and molecules. It is
enormously strong compared with gravity. For example, the absence of only
one electron out of every billion molecules in two 70-kilogram (154-pound)
persons standing two metres (two yards) apart would repel them with a
30,000-ton force. On a more familiar scale, electric phenomena are
responsible for the lightning and thunder accompanying certain storms.
Electric and magnetic forces can be
detected in regions called electric and magnetic fields. These fields are
fundamental in nature and can exist in space far from the charge or current
that generated them. Remarkably, electric fields can produce magnetic fields
and vice versa, independent of any external charge. A changing magnetic
field produces an electric field, as the English physicist Michael Faraday
discovered in work that forms the basis of electric power generation.
Conversely, a changing electric field produces a magnetic field, as the
Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell deduced. The mathematical equations
formulated by Maxwell incorporated light and wave phenomena into
electromagnetism. He showed that electric and magnetic fields travel
together through space as waves of electromagnetic radiation, with the
changing fields mutually sustaining each other. Examples of electromagnetic
waves traveling through space independent of matter are radio and television
waves, microwaves, infrared rays, visible light, ultraviolet light, X rays,
and gamma rays. All of these waves travel at the same speed--namely, the
velocity of light (roughly 300,000 kilometres, or 186,000 miles, per
second). They differ from each other only in the frequency at which their
electric and magnetic fields oscillate.
Maxwell's equations still provide a
complete and elegant description of electromagnetism down to, but not
including, the subatomic scale. The interpretation of his work, however, was
broadened in the 20th century. Einstein's special relativity theory merged
electric and magnetic fields into one common field and limited the velocity
of all matter to the velocity of electromagnetic radiation. During the late
1960s, physicists discovered that other forces in nature have fields with a
mathematical structure similar to that of the electromagnetic field. These
other forces are the nuclear force, responsible for the energy released in
nuclear fusion, and the weak force, observed in the radioactive decay of
unstable atomic nuclei. In particular, the weak and electromagnetic forces
have been combined into a common force called the electroweak force. The
goal of many physicists to unite all of the fundamental forces, including
gravity, into one grand unified theory has not been attained to date.
An important aspect of
electromagnetism is the science of electricity, which is concerned with the
behaviour of aggregates of charge, including the distribution of charge
within matter and the motion of charge from place to place. Different types
of materials are classified as either conductors or insulators on the basis
of whether charges can move freely through their constituent matter.
Electric current is the measure of the flow of charges; the laws governing
currents in matter are important in technology, particularly in the
production, distribution, and control of energy.
The concept of voltage, like those of charge and current, is fundamental to
the science of electricity. Voltage is a measure of the propensity of charge
to flow from one place to another; positive charges generally tend to move
from a region of high voltage to a region of lower voltage. A common problem
in electricity is determining the relationship between voltage and current
or charge in a given physical situation.
This article seeks to provide a
qualitative understanding of electromagnetism as well as a quantitative
appreciation for the magnitudes associated with electromagnetic phenomena.
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