Magnetostatics

Summary

Magnetostatics is the study of magnetic fields in systems where the currents are steady (not changing with time). It is the magnetic analogue of electrostatics, where the charges are stationary. The magnetization need not be static; the equations of magnetostatics can be used to predict fast magnetic switching events that occur on time scales of nanoseconds or less.[1] Magnetostatics is even a good approximation when the currents are not static – as long as the currents do not alternate rapidly. Magnetostatics is widely used in applications of micromagnetics such as models of magnetic storage devices as in computer memory.

Applications edit

Magnetostatics as a special case of Maxwell's equations edit

Starting from Maxwell's equations and assuming that charges are either fixed or move as a steady current  , the equations separate into two equations for the electric field (see electrostatics) and two for the magnetic field.[2] The fields are independent of time and each other. The magnetostatic equations, in both differential and integral forms, are shown in the table below.

Name Form
Differential Integral
Gauss's law
for magnetism
   
Ampère's law    

Where ∇ with the dot denotes divergence, and B is the magnetic flux density, the first integral is over a surface   with oriented surface element  . Where ∇ with the cross denotes curl, J is the current density and H is the magnetic field intensity, the second integral is a line integral around a closed loop   with line element  . The current going through the loop is  .

The quality of this approximation may be guessed by comparing the above equations with the full version of Maxwell's equations and considering the importance of the terms that have been removed. Of particular significance is the comparison of the   term against the   term. If the   term is substantially larger, then the smaller term may be ignored without significant loss of accuracy.

Re-introducing Faraday's law edit

A common technique is to solve a series of magnetostatic problems at incremental time steps and then use these solutions to approximate the term  . Plugging this result into Faraday's Law finds a value for   (which had previously been ignored). This method is not a true solution of Maxwell's equations but can provide a good approximation for slowly changing fields.[citation needed]

Solving for the magnetic field edit

Current sources edit

If all currents in a system are known (i.e., if a complete description of the current density   is available) then the magnetic field can be determined, at a position r, from the currents by the Biot–Savart equation:[3]: 174 

 

This technique works well for problems where the medium is a vacuum or air or some similar material with a relative permeability of 1. This includes air-core inductors and air-core transformers. One advantage of this technique is that, if a coil has a complex geometry, it can be divided into sections and the integral evaluated for each section. Since this equation is primarily used to solve linear problems, the contributions can be added. For a very difficult geometry, numerical integration may be used.

For problems where the dominant magnetic material is a highly permeable magnetic core with relatively small air gaps, a magnetic circuit approach is useful. When the air gaps are large in comparison to the magnetic circuit length, fringing becomes significant and usually requires a finite element calculation. The finite element calculation uses a modified form of the magnetostatic equations above in order to calculate magnetic potential. The value of   can be found from the magnetic potential.

The magnetic field can be derived from the vector potential. Since the divergence of the magnetic flux density is always zero,

 
and the relation of the vector potential to current is:[3]: 176 
 

Magnetization edit

Strongly magnetic materials (i.e., ferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic or paramagnetic) have a magnetization that is primarily due to electron spin. In such materials the magnetization must be explicitly included using the relation

 

Except in the case of conductors, electric currents can be ignored. Then Ampère's law is simply

 

This has the general solution

 
where   is a scalar potential.[3]: 192  Substituting this in Gauss's law gives
 

Thus, the divergence of the magnetization,   has a role analogous to the electric charge in electrostatics[4] and is often referred to as an effective charge density  .

The vector potential method can also be employed with an effective current density

 

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hiebert, W; Ballentine, G; Freeman, M (2002). "Comparison of experimental and numerical micromagnetic dynamics in coherent precessional switching and modal oscillations". Physical Review B. 65 (14): 140404. Bibcode:2002PhRvB..65n0404H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.65.140404.
  2. ^ The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. II Ch. 13: Magnetostatics
  3. ^ a b c Jackson, John David (1975). Classical electrodynamics (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 047143132X.
  4. ^ Aharoni, Amikam (1996). Introduction to the Theory of Ferromagnetism. Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-851791-2.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Magnetostatics at Wikimedia Commons