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.
yes, carbon is the only non-metal that is magnetic.
Yes, all magnets have a magnetic field. When a material becomes magnetized, it creates a magnetic field around itself that attracts or repels other materials. This magnetic field is the reason why magnets can exert force on other magnets or magnetic materials.
If an electron enters a magnetic field parallel to the field lines (i.e., parallel to B), it will not experience any deflection or force due to the magnetic field. This is because the force on a charged particle moving parallel to a magnetic field is zero.
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
A change in the core would have the greatest effect on the Earth's magnetic field. The Earth's magnetic field is generated by the movement of liquid iron in the outer core. Any changes in the core can directly impact the strength and orientation of the magnetic field.
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.
As a superconducting material transitions into its superconducting state, it ejects internal magnetic fields. In that light, yes, a superconductor could be said to expel a magnetic field according to what is called the Meissner effect. A link can be found below.
A magnetic field is created around the path of travel of any moving charged particle. This is the only way to create a magnetic field, and it is why we call one of the four basic forces in the universe the electromagnetic force. A magnetic field cannot exist without the movement of a charge or charges to create it. Conversely, any charged particle that moves cannot move without creating a magnetic field about its path of travel.
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.
No, Eris does not have a magnetic field. It is a dwarf planet located in the outer solar system and does not exhibit any magnetic field like some other planets do.
It will not have any affect at all HaYLEy