| ElectromagnetismThe discovery of the relationship between 
                    magnetism and electricity was, like so many other scientific 
                    discoveries, stumbled upon almost by accident. The Danish 
                    physicist Hans Christian Oersted was lecturing one day in 
                    1820 on the possibility of electricity and magnetism 
                    being related to one another, and in the process 
                    demonstrated it conclusively by experiment in front of his 
                    whole class! By passing an electric current through a metal 
                    wire suspended above a magnetic compass, Oersted was able to 
                    produce a definite motion of the compass needle in response 
                    to the current. What began as conjecture at the start of the 
                    class session was confirmed as fact at the end. Needless to 
                    say, Oersted had to revise his lecture notes for future 
                    classes! His serendipitous discovery paved the way for a 
                    whole new branch of science: electromagnetics.  Detailed experiments showed that the 
                    magnetic field produced by an electric current is always 
                    oriented perpendicular to the direction of flow. A simple 
                    method of showing this relationship is called the 
                    left-hand rule. Simply stated, the left-hand rule says 
                    that the magnetic flux lines produced by a current-carrying 
                    wire will be oriented the same direction as the curled 
                    fingers of a person's left hand (in the "hitchhiking" 
                    position), with the thumb pointing in the direction of 
                    electron flow:  
                      The magnetic field encircles this straight 
                    piece of current-carrying wire, the magnetic flux lines 
                    having no definite "north" or "south' poles.  While the magnetic field surrounding a 
                    current-carrying wire is indeed interesting, it is quite 
                    weak for common amounts of current, able to deflect a 
                    compass needle and not much more. To create a stronger 
                    magnetic field force (and consequently, more field flux) 
                    with the same amount of electric current, we can wrap the 
                    wire into a coil shape, where the circling magnetic fields 
                    around the wire will join to create a larger field with a 
                    definite magnetic (north and south) polarity:  
                      The amount of magnetic field force generated 
                    by a coiled wire is proportional to the current through the 
                    wire multiplied by the number of "turns" or "wraps" of wire 
                    in the coil. This field force is called magnetomotive 
                    force (mmf), and is very much analogous to electromotive 
                    force (E) in an electric circuit.  An electromagnet is a piece of wire 
                    intended to generate a magnetic field with the passage of 
                    electric current through it. Though all current-carrying 
                    conductors produce magnetic fields, an electromagnet is 
                    usually constructed in such a way as to maximize the 
                    strength of the magnetic field it produces for a special 
                    purpose. Electromagnets find frequent application in 
                    research, industry, medical, and consumer products.  As an electrically-controllable magnet, 
                    electromagnets find application in a wide variety of 
                    "electromechanical" devices: machines that effect mechanical 
                    force or motion through electrical power. Perhaps the most 
                    obvious example of such a machine is the electric motor.
                     Another example is the relay, an 
                    electrically-controlled switch. If a switch contact 
                    mechanism is built so that it can be actuated (opened and 
                    closed) by the application of a magnetic field, and an 
                    electromagnet coil is placed in the near vicinity to produce 
                    that requisite field, it will be possible to open and close 
                    the switch by the application of a current through the coil. 
                    In effect, this gives us a device that enables elelctricity 
                    to control electricity:  
                      Relays can be constructed to actuate 
                    multiple switch contacts, or operate them in "reverse" 
                    (energizing the coil will open the switch contact, 
                    and unpowering the coil will allow it to spring closed 
                    again).  
                      
                      
                      REVIEW: 
                      When electrons flow through a conductor, a 
                      magnetic field will be produced around that conductor.
                      
                      The left-hand rule states that the 
                      magnetic flux lines produced by a current-carrying wire 
                      will be oriented the same direction as the curled fingers 
                      of a person's left hand (in the "hitchhiking" position), 
                      with the thumb pointing in the direction of electron flow.
                      
                      The magnetic field force produced by a 
                      current-carrying wire can be greatly increased by shaping 
                      the wire into a coil instead of a straight line. If wound 
                      in a coil shape, the magnetic field will be oriented along 
                      the axis of the coil's length. 
                      The magnetic field force produced by an 
                      electromagnet (called the magnetomotive force, or 
                      mmf), is proportional to the product (multiplication) of 
                      the current through the electromagnet and the number of 
                      complete coil "turns" formed by the wire.  |