- #1
arunma
- 927
- 4
I started asking this question after one of my students had trouble with a problem asking for the net force on a current loop in a homogeneous magnetic field (on my first day of TAing, no less!). A current loop in a magnetic field will experience a torque, but not a net force. I always assumed that this was because magnetic fields do no work, until I noticed that a magnetic dipole in a non-homogeneous magnetic field will accelerate. Bar magnets are ab example of this.
So here's my question. David Griffiths says, in his textbook, that magnetic fields never do any work. My E&M professor, however, told me today that magnetic fields are able to do work. Which is it?
So here's my question. David Griffiths says, in his textbook, that magnetic fields never do any work. My E&M professor, however, told me today that magnetic fields are able to do work. Which is it?