Skip to content Smaller textLarger text

Topic Page:

Magnetism

magnetism, force of attraction or repulsion between various substances, especially those made of iron and certain other metals; ultimately it is due to the motion of electric charges.

Magnetic Poles, Forces, and Fields

Any object that exhibits magnetic properties is called a magnet. Every magnet has two points, or poles, where most of its strength is concentrated; these are designated as a north-seeking pole, or north pole, and a south-seeking pole, or south pole, because a suspended magnet tends to orient itself along a north-south line. Since a magnet has two poles, it is sometimes called a magnetic dipole, being analogous to an electric dipole, composed of two opposite charges. The like poles of different magnets repel each other, and the unlike poles attract each other.

Continue reading

Columbia University Press The Columbia Encyclopedia, © Columbia University Press 2013


APA | Chicago | Harvard | MLA

 
Journal articles, books, images, news and more.
Click to scroll to additional content.

IMAGES FROM CREDO

The mass of an atom depends on the size of the...Diagram of magnet.
Diagram showing magnetic field.

REFERENCES

  • Cawood, John, “The Magnetic Crusade: Science and Politics in Early Victorian Britain”, Isis, 70 (1979): 493-518.
  • Chapman, Sydney; Julius Bartels, Geomagnetism, 2 vols, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1940; revised edition, 1962.
  • Fanning, A. E., Steady As She Goes: A History of the Compass Department of the Admiralty, London: HMSO, 1986.
  • Fara, Patricia, Sympathetic Attractions: Magnetic Practices, Beliefs, and Symbolism in Eighteenth-Century England, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1996.
  • Harris, William Snow, Rudimentary Magnetism: Being a Concise Exposition of the General Principles of Magnetical Science, London: John Weale, 1850; 2nd edition revised and expanded by Noad, Henry M., London: Lockwood, 1872.

From Credo

  • Home, Roderick W., “The Magnetic Crusade: Science and Politics in Early Victorian Britain”“Introduction”, in Aepinus's Essay on the Theory of Electricity and Magnetism, by Aepinus, F. U.T., edited by Home; P. J. Connor, translated by Connor, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1979.
  • Livingston, James D., Driving Force: The Natural Magic of Magnets, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1996.
  • McConnell, Anita, “Nineteenth-Century Geomagnetic Instruments and Their Makers”, in Nineteenth Century Scientific Instruments and Their Makers, edited by de Clercq, Peter R., Leiden and Amsterdam: Museum Boerhaave/Rodopi, 1985.
  • May, W.E., with a chapter by Leonard Holder, A History of Marine Navigation, Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire: Foulis, and New York: Norton, 1973.
  • Mottelay, Paul F., Bibliographical History of Electricity and Magnetism, Chronologically Arranged, London: Charles Griffith, 1922; reprinted, New York: Arno Press, 1975.
  • Pumfrey, Stephen, “William Gilbert's Magnetical Philosophy, 1580-1684: The Creation and Dissolution of a Discipline”, Dissertation, Warburg Institute, University of London, 1987.
  • Smith, Julian A., “Precursors to Peregrinus: The Early History of Magnetism and the Mariner's Compass in Europe”, Journal of Medieval History, 18 (1992): 21-74.
  • Verschuur, Gerrit L., Hidden Attraction: The History and Mystery of Magnetism, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
  • Warner, Deborah Jean, “Terrestrial Magnetism: For the Glory of God and the Benefit of Mankind”, Osiris, 9 (1994): 67-84.