An EM field is not considered a force. It can however create a force if a conductive medium is moved through it.
Well one way to look at it is that a photon IS an electromagnetic field. The photon is the gauge particle for the electromagnetic force. Without photons there would be no electromagnetic interaction force, and therefore no electromagnetic fields.
an electromagnetic field interacts with charged particles.
This is the Electromagnetic force. (Technically, it's the Lorentz force, which is the force on a charge due to an electromagnetic field, but either will do.)
An electromagnetic field
It could stand for Electromagnetic field, or Electromotive force.
Well one way to look at it is that a photon IS an electromagnetic field. The photon is the gauge particle for the electromagnetic force. Without photons there would be no electromagnetic interaction force, and therefore no electromagnetic fields.
an electromagnetic field interacts with charged particles.
This is the Electromagnetic force. (Technically, it's the Lorentz force, which is the force on a charge due to an electromagnetic field, but either will do.)
The electromagnetic force is a force that is expressed as (or that "shows up as") a "field" or a "group of lines of force" around the source. Electromagnetic flux is a direct reference to those magnetic lines of force. Electromagnetic flux is the electromagnetic field or the group of electromagnetic lines of force around the source. All the following sentences say the same thing: The electromagnetic flux around the magnet was very high. The magnetic flux around the magnet was very high. The magnetic field around the magnet was very large. The flux around the magnet was very high. The field around the magnet was very large. There were a large number of magnetic lines of force around the magnet making the field strength very high.
It depends what you are talking about... Electromagnetic field Electromagnetic force Electromagnetic radiation Electromagnetic spectrum Electromagnetic therapy Electromagnetic waves ...they each have different meanings.
An electromagnetic field
The magnetic field. If it's an electromagnet, the electromagnetic field.
It could stand for Electromagnetic field, or Electromotive force.
As light can also travel in vacuum so no extra force can change its direction.
Electromagnetic induction is the production of an electromotive force across a conductor when it is exposed to a varying magnetic field. Basically it works because of electricity.
Electromagnetic force field.
the same, just closer.