electromagnetism

listen to the pronunciation of electromagnetism
English - Turkish
elektromanyetizma
(Tıp) Mıknatısi elektrik, elektromanyetizm
English - English
Electricity and magnetism, collectively, as a field of study
A unified fundamental force that combines the aspects of electricity and magnetism and is one of the four fundamental forces. (technically it can be unified with weak nuclear to form electroweak) Its gauge boson is the photon
magnetism produced by an electric current; "electromagnetism was discovered when it was observed that a copper wire carrying an electric current can magnetize pieces of iron or steel near it"
{i} magnetism produced by electric currents
Interactions between electric and magnetic fields and with electric charges and currents
1 Magnetism produced by an electric current
The magnetism developed by a current of electricity; the science which treats of the development of magnetism by means of voltaic electricity, and of the properties or actions of the currents evolved
a force relating to electric and magnetic fields, or the study of this force. Branch of physics that deals with the relationship between electricity and magnetism. Their merger into one concept is tied to three historical events. Hans C. Orsted's accidental discovery in 1820 that magnetic fields are produced by electric currents spurred efforts to prove that magnetic fields can induce currents. Michael Faraday showed in 1831 that a changing magnetic field can induce a current in a circuit, and James Clerk Maxwell predicted that a changing electric field has an associated magnetic field. The technological revolution attributed to the development of electric power and modern communications can be traced to these three landmarks
the generation of a magnetic field around a current-carrying conductor
The study of the relationship between electricity and magnetism
the branch of physics concerned with electromagnetic phenomena magnetism produced by an electric current; "electromagnetism was discovered when it was observed that a copper wire carrying an electric current can magnetize pieces of iron or steel near it
the branch of physics concerned with electromagnetic phenomena
magnetism that is developed by current flowing through a wire
The union of electricity and magnetism, which do not exist as independent quantities, but are in reality two aspects of a single physical phenomenon
electromagnetism

    Hyphenation

    e·lec·tro·mag·net·i·sm

    Turkish pronunciation

    îlektrōmägnıtîzım

    Pronunciation

    /əˌlektrōˈmagnəˌtəzəm/ /ɪˌlɛktroʊˈmæɡnəˌtɪzəm/

    Etymology

    () electro- + magnetism
Favorites