Rate of change of electric charge produces magnetic charge.
Unit of electric charge is coulomb C, unit of magnetic charge would be Ampere-meter.
Yes, the magnetic force on an electric charge is perpendicular to both the velocity of the charge and the direction of the magnetic field. This is known as the right-hand rule for determining the direction of the magnetic force on a moving charge.
A charge moving perpendicular to a magnetic field experiences a force that is perpendicular to both the charge's velocity and the magnetic field direction. This force causes the charge to move in a circular path around the field lines, with the radius of the circle determined by the charge's speed and the strength of the magnetic field. This phenomenon is known as magnetic deflection.
The magnetic field produced by a charge at a point is the force exerted by the charge on a moving charged particle at that point.
The force acting on a charge moving in the direction of a magnetic field is perpendicular to both the direction of the charge's movement and the magnetic field. This force is known as the magnetic Lorentz force and will cause the charge to move in a circular path.
By placing the stationary charge in a magnetic field that is changing over time, a magnetic force will be induced on the charge, causing it to move. This is known as electromagnetic induction. The moving magnetic field induces an electric field that then exerts a force on the charge, resulting in its movement.
No the battery don't have a magnetic charge.
The ampere is the SI Base Unit or electric current. It is NOT derived from the charge (coulomb) but from the force resulting from its magnetic effect. The ampere is defined in terms of the force between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors due to the interaction of their magnetic fields. The coulomb, on the other hand, is an SI Derived Unit, based on the ampere and the second.
A unit of magnetic flux is called a Weber.
Electro Magnetic Unit was created in 2004-04.
Yes. A spinning charge will create a magnetic field as will a moving charge.
Yes, the magnetic force on an electric charge is perpendicular to both the velocity of the charge and the direction of the magnetic field. This is known as the right-hand rule for determining the direction of the magnetic force on a moving charge.
the unit of magnetic field is tesla (si unit ) and gauss (cgs ) unit.1 tesla = 10,000 gauss .1 tesla= 1N/mAAnswerIt depends on what you mean by 'magnetic field'. If you mean 'magnetic flux', then the SI unit is the weber(pronounced 'vay-ber'). If you mean 'magnetic flux density', then the SI unit is the tesla. If you mean 'magnetic field strength', then the SI unit is the ampere per metre.
Because the magnetic charge makes a electicric charge ing the magnetic field.
A charge moving perpendicular to a magnetic field experiences a force that is perpendicular to both the charge's velocity and the magnetic field direction. This force causes the charge to move in a circular path around the field lines, with the radius of the circle determined by the charge's speed and the strength of the magnetic field. This phenomenon is known as magnetic deflection.
The unit of magnetism are: Weber for magnetic flux, Tesla for magnetic flux density and ampere per meter for magnetic field strength.
The magnetic field produced by a charge at a point is the force exerted by the charge on a moving charged particle at that point.
The force acting on a charge moving in the direction of a magnetic field is perpendicular to both the direction of the charge's movement and the magnetic field. This force is known as the magnetic Lorentz force and will cause the charge to move in a circular path.