Electrical Engineering - Magnetism and Electromagnetism - Discussion

Discussion Forum : Magnetism and Electromagnetism - General Questions (Q.No. 16)
16.
The direction of a magnetic field within a magnet is
from south to north
from north to south
back to front
front to back
Answer: Option
Explanation:
No answer description is available. Let's discuss.
Discussion:
15 comments Page 1 of 2.

Bharanidharan said:   1 decade ago
The direction of magnetic field is true north to true south.

Ak sharma said:   1 decade ago
It should be from north pole to south pole.

Aanchal said:   1 decade ago
Inside it is south to north. Read carefully.

Jagadeesh said:   1 decade ago
Can you give the example please?

Sairam said:   1 decade ago
Yes we have to make a note that within the magnet. So, flux lines will travel from south to north within the magnet.

Sunil said:   1 decade ago
How it work from south to north?

Muhammad Asif Latif said:   1 decade ago
The Magnetic field leave the north pole and enter in south pole so within magnet it is south to no north.

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Sanjeeb said:   1 decade ago
What is the cause for south to north?

Ajay said:   9 years ago
The fields leave from north to south outside the magnet, and that field comes back to the magnet to the south pole and flows to the north inside the magnet and so on.

That's why we can say the magnetic field flows from south to north within (inside) the magnet.

Hope everyone understood.

Shivu mandya said:   9 years ago
Image result for the direction of a magnetic field within a magnet.

The lines of the magnetic field from a bar magnet from closed lines. By convention, the field direction is taken to be outward from the North pole and into the South pole of the magnet. Permanent magnets can be made from ferromagnetic materials.


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