Basically moving electric charges will create a magnetic field.
Yes; if the storage is on magnetic media then that can be altered by magnetic and electric fields.
Electric fields are similar to magnetic fields, and can be "compressed" by the imposition of other electric or magnetic fields.
Yes, electric current does create magnetic fields
Vibrations in electric and magnetic fields create electromagnetic radiation.
no
Both magnetic materials and moving electric charges induce magnetic fields.
The dynamo. For terrestrial planets, the dynamo is a molten core of nickel-iron. Mercury and Earth have fairly strong dynamos and therefore fairly strong magnetic fields. Venus and Mars do not, and have only weak magnetic fields.
Faraday's Law states that magnetic fields produce a electric fields and vice versa. Also, Ampere's Law states that a change in magnetic fields w.r.t. time creates current.
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.
-- A current flowing through a conductor creates a magnetic field around the conductor. -- Moving a conductor through a constant magnetic field creates a current in the conductor. -- If there's a conductor sitting motionless in a magnetic field, a current flows in the conductor whenever the strength or direction of the magnetic field changes.
The Magnetic Fields was created in 1989.
Magnetic fields can be blocked. Magnetic fields cannot penetrate a superconductor, and regions can be shielded from magnetic fields using ferromagnetic materials.
magnetic fields are essential to production of electricity
Paper is not affected by magnetic fields.
Electrical flow creates magnetic fields around the wires. The distance helps prevent interruptions and problems in the flow.
Magnetic Fields - album - was created in 1981-05.
rocks with magnetic fields that point south have