- Ampere-meter
The ampere-metre which has the symbol A m, A-m, or A·m is the
SI unit for pole strength in amagnet .Derivation
Einstein proved that amagnetic field is the relativistic part of anelectric field . This means that while an electric field acts between charges, a magnetic field acts between "moving" charges (as a charge moves through space more quickly and through time more slowly, its electromagnetic force becomes more magnetic and less electric). Therefore, the pole strength is the product of charge andvelocity .Usefulness
Few calculations actually involve the strength of a pole in ampere-metres because a single magnetic pole has never been isolated. Magnets are dipoles which require more complicated calculations than monopoles. However, the strength of a magnetic field is measured in teslas and one tesla is one newton per ampere-metre which confirms that the unit for pole strength is indeed the ampere-metre.
Misconceptions
The idea that magnetic forces act on moving charges is clear in an
electromagnet but not obvious in apermanent magnet . In fact, all substances have charges moving in them all of the time, one of the difficulties in reachingabsolute zero . In most substances, all of the magnetic fields produced by this motion cancel each other out, but magnetic substances have more proper alignment. At the microscopic level, many molecules are magnets —hydrogen fluoride for example is a dipole.Polarity is most often expressed in terms ofelectronegativity but the strength of its poles could be expressed in ampere-metres as well.References
* [http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/einsteinlight/jw/module2_FEB.htm| the electric and magnetic forces between moving charges]
* [http://www.qsl.net/g4cnn/units/units.htm| units in electricity and magnetism]
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