Yes, electric current does create magnetic fields
Vibrations in electric and magnetic fields create electromagnetic radiation.
Moving electric charges create electromagnetic fields.
Basically moving electric charges will create a magnetic field.
Magnetic fields can be created by charges or the flow of current.
False, electric fields and magnetic fields do not often occur together.
Maxwell's equations state that electric fields create magnetic fields, and vice versa. If you have a current, you have a magnetic field. If you have magnets, you have an electric field.
No. Current flow creates electromagnetic fields in space. Electromagnetic fields, in turn, can create current flow in conductors. The electric fields do not directly create magnetic fields, nor do magnetic fields directly create electric fields.
The two are related because an Electric current produces Magnetic Fields
Vibrations in electric and magnetic fields create electromagnetic radiation.
Moving electric charges create electromagnetic fields.
Basically moving electric charges will create a magnetic field.
Magnetic fields can be created by charges or the flow of current.
All electric currents create magnetic fields. If you wind wire into a coil and pass current through the wire, that is an electromagnet.
Faraday showed that a wire passing through a magnetic field will produce electricity. This is how a generator works. Many windings of wire on an armature spin in a magnetic field. This makes electricity.
Electromagnetism is the interaction of electric currents or fields and magnetic fields. It is the magnetic field created when an electric current passes through a wire, and is extremely useful because the magnetic effect stops as soon as the current stops.
False, electric fields and magnetic fields do not often occur together.
Electric fields are similar to magnetic fields, and can be "compressed" by the imposition of other electric or magnetic fields.