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Yes, a magnetic field won't penetrate a superconductor. That's called the Meissner effect.
Insulation or a lawsuit. Just kidding (sort of). A magnetic field forms around the wire, because magnetic field are formed any time electric charge moves.
Magnetic materials concentrate magnetic field lines inside themselves, so if you have something you don't want exposed to a magnetic field, you could put it inside a soft iron box and the magnetic field inside the box will be less than it would be if the box wasn't there. But no, there's nothing that absolutely stops a magnetic field.
You an expect any planet or moon to have magnetic fields. Some more, some less.
we know that force on a charge in magnetic field F=qvbsinx q-charge v-velocity b-strenth 0f magnetic field x-angle between the motion of chage and the magnetic field as the charge is stationary so v=0 so,F=0 so charge donot fill any force on it.
Because it is far too small to have any effect. The Earth's magnetic field is thought to be generated thousands of miles underground by moving rivers of iron.
A magnetic field is induced around any conductor carrying an electric current.As explained in the Oersted Theory.
Yes, a magnetic field won't penetrate a superconductor. That's called the Meissner effect.
Type your answer here... Any molecule is placed in a magnetic field,the electrons rotate around the nucleus and forms the induced field (or) secondary field that induced field is apposed to the applaid magnetic field ,so the protons are protected i.e called shielding effect
any material can insulate magnetic field
If there is any effect at all, it would need to be a very tiny one. The only way that the Earth's rotation might affect the Sun would be in the way the Earth's rotation generates Earth's magnetic field. Our magnetic field affects the way that coronal mass ejections, huge bubbles of ionized gas from the Sun, behave when they get close. But the Sun has a magnetic field of its own, much stronger than the Earth's field, and it is unlikely that the Earth's magnetic field would affect the Sun or the Sun's magnetic field in more than a minuscule fashion.
Any time a current flows, any time an electrical charge moves, it is surrounded by a magnetic field. Several devices made by humans make use of this effect.
This is true for any contiguous function, not just magnetic fields.
It will not have any affect at all HaYLEy
Assuming there is no Earth magnetic field, and no other significant magnetic fields, they will not allign in any preferred direction.
no it does not
Current flow in any conductor creates a magnetic field, winding just concentrates it.