No
Magnetic field lines form closed loops, while electric field lines start and end on charges. Also, magnetic field lines do not begin or end; they always form continuous loops.
Magnetic field lines always form closed loops, while electric field lines begin and end on charges. Additionally, magnetic field lines do not originate from monopoles, while electric field lines can begin and end on electric charges.
One key difference between electric and magnetic fields is that electric field lines originate from positive charges and end on negative charges, forming closed loops; whereas, magnetic field lines always form closed loops, never having a starting or ending point.
Magnetic field lines are closed loops, while electric field lines always start at positive charges and end at negative charges. Additionally, magnetic field lines do not have beginning or end points, unlike electric field lines which have distinct starting and ending points.
Magnetic field lines are similar to electric field lines in that they both represent the direction and strength of the field at various points in space. Both types of field lines are used to visualize the field's behavior and provide insights into the field's properties. However, magnetic field lines form closed loops, while electric field lines start and end on charges.
Electrostatic field lines represent the direction of the electric field at each point in space. They originate from positive charges and terminate on negative charges, ensuring that they do not form closed loops. This is because field lines cannot start or end at a point without a charge, and must always connect charges to maintain the conservation of electric flux.
they show wich way iron shavings would align themselves They always make closed loops. Electric field lines can either form closed loops or they can start and finish on isolated electric charges. Magnetic field lines always only form closed loops.
Yes, magnetic field lines form closed loops that are continuous. They always start from the north pole of a magnet, loop around the magnet, and return to the south pole.
Magnetic fields do, because there's no such thing as an isolated magnetic "pole", and a magnetic line always starts and ends at opposite poles of the same magnetized object. But electric fields don't. You can easily have a bundle of isolated positive charge over here and a bundle of isolated negative charge over there, whereupon the lines of the electric field start on one bundle and end on the other bundle. But electric field lines can also exist in closed loops, and they do that in radio waves, where the electromagnetic field propagates with an electric field component and a magnetic field component, and they both form closed loops.
yes because they start from the positive charge and ends at the negative charge so closed path
APEX: Field lines that are close together indicate a stronger magnetic field. They don't affect the magnet that created them. They never cross. They begin on north poles and end on south poles.
No, magnetic fields are typically represented by field lines that form closed loops or straight lines. They do not exhibit a parabolic shape.