CHAP. XI - Permanent Magnetism
from MAGNETISM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
Summary
PHYSICAL PHENOMENA.
It is found that certain bodies, known as magnets, will attract or repel one another, while a magnet will also exert forces on pieces of iron or steel which are not themselves magnets, these forces being invariably attractive. The most familiar fact of magnetism, namely the tendency of a magnetic needle to point north and south, is simply a particular instance of the first of the sets of phenomena just mentioned, it being found that the earth itself may be regarded as a vast aggregation of magnets.
The simplest piece of apparatus used for the experimental study of magnetism is that known as a bar-magnet. This consists of a bar of steel which shews the property of attracting to itself small pieces of steel or iron. Usually it is found that the magnetic properties of a bar-magnet reside largely or entirely at its two ends. For instance, if the whole bar is dipped into a collection of iron filings, it is found that the filings are attracted in great numbers to its two ends, while there is hardly any attraction to the middle parts, so that on lifting the bar out from the collection of filings, we shall find that filings continue to cluster round the ends of the bar, while the middle regions will be comparatively free.
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- Mathematical Theory of Electricity and Magnetism , pp. 364 - 407Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1908