Physics Notes Magnetism and Matter
Welcome students. In this guide, Kumar Sir explains Magnetism and Matter in a simple, exam-oriented and concept-based manner so that students can prepare confidently for board exams, NEET, JEE Main, JEE Advanced, IB Physics, IGCSE Physics and A-Level Physics.
Introduction to Magnetism and Matter
Magnetism is the branch of Physics that deals with magnetic fields, magnetic forces, magnets and the behaviour of materials in a magnetic field. Whenever charges move, magnetic effects are produced. A simple bar magnet, the Earth, an electric motor, a speaker, a compass, MRI machines and many measuring instruments depend on magnetism.
For students, Magnetism and Matter is an important chapter because it connects visual diagrams with mathematical formulas. If you understand the direction of magnetic field lines, the idea of magnetic dipole moment and the behaviour of magnetic materials, the chapter becomes very logical. Kumar Sir always advises students not to memorize this chapter blindly. First understand the picture, then the formula, then the exam question.
Bar Magnet
A bar magnet is a rectangular magnet having two poles: north pole and south pole. The magnetic strength is concentrated near the poles. Like poles repel and unlike poles attract. If a bar magnet is freely suspended, it approximately aligns itself along the north-south direction of Earth.
A very important point is that an isolated north pole or isolated south pole has never been found. When a magnet is broken into pieces, each piece again behaves like a complete magnet with both north and south poles. This is why a bar magnet is treated as a magnetic dipole.
Magnetic Field Lines
Magnetic field lines are imaginary lines used to represent magnetic field direction and strength. Outside a bar magnet, field lines emerge from the north pole and enter the south pole. Inside the magnet, they go from south to north. Therefore magnetic field lines are always closed continuous curves.
Students must remember that magnetic field lines never intersect each other. If two field lines intersect, it would mean two directions of magnetic field at the same point, which is impossible. The closeness of field lines indicates field strength: crowded lines mean stronger magnetic field.
Important Board Exam Points
Draw neat field lines, show direction using arrows, mention closed-loop nature and write that no magnetic monopoles exist. These points are frequently useful in CBSE and ICSE answers.
Bar Magnet as an Equivalent Solenoid
A current carrying solenoid produces a magnetic field similar to that of a bar magnet. One end behaves like a north pole and the other end behaves like a south pole. The field pattern outside a solenoid resembles the field pattern of a bar magnet.
This analogy helps students understand why atomic current loops can produce magnetism in matter. In conceptual questions, students may be asked why a solenoid behaves like a magnet or how magnetic field lines of a bar magnet and a solenoid are similar. The answer is that both create closed magnetic field lines and both behave as magnetic dipoles.
Magnetic Dipole in Uniform Magnetic Field
When a magnetic dipole is placed in a uniform magnetic field, it experiences torque. This torque tries to align the dipole moment with the magnetic field. If the magnetic dipole moment is m and magnetic field is B, then torque is given by:
The torque is zero when θ = 0° or θ = 180°. At θ = 0°, the dipole is in stable equilibrium because it is aligned with the field and has minimum potential energy. At θ = 180°, it is in unstable equilibrium because a small disturbance can rotate it away from that position.
Magnetic Potential Energy
The potential energy of a magnetic dipole in a uniform magnetic field is:
This formula tells us that energy is minimum when the dipole is parallel to the field and maximum when it is anti-parallel. This concept is useful in understanding compass needles, magnetic materials and torque-based questions.
Gauss Law of Magnetism
Gauss law of magnetism states that the net magnetic flux through any closed surface is zero. Mathematically, it is written as:
This does not mean magnetic field is zero. It means the number of magnetic field lines entering a closed surface is equal to the number of magnetic field lines leaving it. The reason is that magnetic monopoles do not exist. Every magnet has both north and south poles.
Electric flux can be non-zero through a closed surface if electric charge is enclosed. But magnetic flux through a closed surface is always zero because isolated magnetic poles are not found. This difference between electric field and magnetic field is a very important conceptual point for CBSE, NEET and JEE.
Magnetisation, Magnetic Intensity and Susceptibility
Magnetisation describes how strongly a material becomes magnetised when placed in an external magnetic field. It is magnetic dipole moment per unit volume. If total magnetic moment is M_total and volume is V, magnetisation is:
Magnetic intensity, usually denoted by H, represents the magnetising field applied to the material. Magnetic field B and magnetic intensity H are related in matter through permeability. Students must not confuse B and H. In simple language, H is connected with the external magnetising cause, while B represents the total magnetic field inside the material.
Magnetic susceptibility tells how easily a material gets magnetised. It is defined as the ratio of magnetisation to magnetic intensity:
Diamagnetism, Paramagnetism and Ferromagnetism
Diamagnetism
Diamagnetic materials are weakly repelled by a magnetic field. Their susceptibility is small and negative. Examples include bismuth, copper, gold and water. They do not retain magnetism after removal of the external field.
Paramagnetism
Paramagnetic materials are weakly attracted by a magnetic field. Their susceptibility is small and positive. Examples include aluminium, platinum and oxygen. Their magnetisation is temporary and disappears when the external magnetic field is removed.
Ferromagnetism
Ferromagnetic materials are strongly attracted by a magnetic field. Their susceptibility is very large and positive. Iron, cobalt and nickel are common examples. Domain theory explains ferromagnetism: small regions called domains behave like tiny magnets. In an unmagnetised material, domains are randomly oriented. In a magnetised material, many domains align in the same direction.
Magnetic Properties of Materials: Comparison Table
| Property | Diamagnetic | Paramagnetic | Ferromagnetic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Susceptibility | Small negative | Small positive | Very large positive |
| Relative Permeability | Slightly less than 1 | Slightly greater than 1 | Much greater than 1 |
| Behaviour in Magnetic Field | Weakly repelled | Weakly attracted | Strongly attracted |
| Examples | Bismuth, copper, water | Aluminium, oxygen, platinum | Iron, cobalt, nickel |
Important Topics to Focus for Different Exams
Common Mistakes Students Make
Many students confuse magnetic poles with electric charges. Remember, magnetic monopoles do not exist. Another common mistake is assuming magnetic field lines start at north pole and end at south pole completely. Actually, they form closed loops. Students also confuse B, H and M. B is magnetic field, H is magnetic intensity and M is magnetisation. In material questions, always check the sign of susceptibility. Diamagnetic susceptibility is negative, while paramagnetic and ferromagnetic susceptibility are positive.
Final Revision Checklist
- Bar Magnet
- Magnetic Field Lines
- Solenoid Analogy
- Magnetic Dipole
- Torque on Dipole
- Stable and Unstable Equilibrium
- Magnetic Potential Energy
- Gauss Law of Magnetism
- Magnetisation
- Magnetic Intensity
- Magnetic Susceptibility
- Diamagnetism
- Paramagnetism
- Ferromagnetism
- Domain Theory
- Comparison Table
Conclusion
Magnetism and Matter becomes easy when students study it through concepts, diagrams and physical meaning. Do not only memorize formulas. Understand why field lines are closed, why magnetic monopoles do not exist, why a dipole experiences torque and why different materials behave differently in a magnetic field. Regular revision of diagrams, definitions, formulas and NCERT questions will make this chapter strong for CBSE, NEET, JEE Main, JEE Advanced, IB, IGCSE and A-Level Physics.
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