Where Does Energy Come From When Hanging a Permanent Magnet?

  • Thread starter Dodig
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of energy in relation to a permanent magnet hanging on a metal bar. The question is raised about where the energy comes from for the magnet to stay in place for years. The idea of electrons and their motion in atoms is brought up as the source of the magnetic field, but it is also argued that this motion generates work. The idea of conservation of energy is also mentioned. Ultimately, it is concluded that the concept of energy may be misunderstood in this context.
  • #1
Dodig
10
0
I have very simple question which I really don't understand:

If you hang a permanent magnet on the metal bar and leave it there
it will hang for years there. I simply ask where does the energy
come from?

This is my first question on this forum so I would really like if
someone could answer this question to me.
 
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  • #2
Hi, and welcome.


If you put a book on a table and leave it there, it will stay for years.

No work is being done, no energy is required.
 
  • #3
brewnog said:
Hi, and welcome.


If you put a book on a table and leave it there, it will stay for years.

No work is being done, no energy is required.

I was thinking of the following configuration:


------------------------------------------------------------
| Iron Bar |
------------------------------------------------------------
| Permanent Magnet |
---------------------



-------------------------------------------------------------
Earth

At first sight, the permanent magnet is not moving. So no work
is generated.

From that viewpoint you can say if the chopper is still in the air there
is no work done. However, in order to float still the propeller must
rotate and engine is turning propeller. Then work is done by the
engine.

But if we look at the problem more closely we see that there is
the magnetic field involved. Since there is the magnetic field
according to 4th Maxwell equation there must be current somewhere.
Then if the current is flowing, the work must be done somewhere.
So where does that energy come from? (i.e. what is the fuel)


P.S. Newbie question. How do I insert equations in the text? :confused:
 
  • #4
Dodig said:
Since there is the magnetic field
according to 4th Maxwell equation there must be current somewhere.

Dodig,

The "current" comes from the motion of electrons orbiting the nuclei of atoms in the magnet. It turns out that when electrons are forced to move in a very small space (like in an atom) they don't lose their energy. They can keep on going forever.

Think about the iron bar that holds the magnet. Half of its atoms are the top and the other half are the bottom of the bar. So you can think of one bar of metal as being two bars stuck together. In this case it's electric forces holding the two halves together, but you'd be pretty surprised if they came apart!
 
  • #5
jdavel said:
Dodig,

The "current" comes from the motion of electrons orbiting the nuclei of atoms in the magnet. It turns out that when electrons are forced to move in a very small space (like in an atom) they don't lose their energy. They can keep on going forever.

Ok, it's true that the electron orbiting the nuclei produces the magnetic
field. It's also true that electron spin is producing magnetic field. However,
by doing so (in permanent magnet case) electrons produce real work. Is
this then the violation of conservation of energy?

To me, saying that electron violates the conservation law sounds like
dogma. Perhaps the conservation laws are dogma?

jdavel said:
Think about the iron bar that holds the magnet. Half of its atoms are the top and the other half are the bottom of the bar. So you can think of one bar of metal as being two bars stuck together. In this case it's electric forces holding the two halves together, but you'd be pretty surprised if they came apart!

You are right, but that's different sort of the problem.
 
  • #6
I don't see why you think it takes work for a permanent magnet to produce a constant magnetic field. The hanging up in the air thing is irrelevant, and your question reduces to:

"Where do magnets get their infinite energy?"

Which shows a misunderstanding of what energy is (the ability to do work).

Magnetic fields are created by currents, and current is charge/time. In wires, charges cannot move at constant velocity in a straight line (the bump each other) so currents always dissapate (resistance). But inside of an atom, there is no one to bumb in to, and an object in motion stays in motion without any work needing to be done!
 
  • #7
Crosson said:
I don't see why you think it takes work for a permanent magnet to produce a constant magnetic field. The hanging up in the air thing is irrelevant, and your question reduces to:

"Where do magnets get their infinite energy?"

Which shows a misunderstanding of what energy is (the ability to do work).

Magnetic fields are created by currents, and current is charge/time. In wires, charges cannot move at constant velocity in a straight line (the bump each other) so currents always dissapate (resistance). But inside of an atom, there is no one to bumb in to, and an object in motion stays in motion without any work needing to be done!

Here is why I do think that permanent magnets do work when producing
constant magnetic field:

Electrons have both spin and they rotate around the nucleus. Let's concentrate on spin only. This spin represents a tiny current which
creates magnetic field. In permanent magnetic materials these spins
are aligned so their orientation is not entirely random so atoms have
net magnetic field.

Now this spin generated magnetic field make the electron move sideways
(Lorentz force). So we have the force and the path thus electron does
work. That is why I think permanent magnets do work.
 
  • #8
Dodig said:
Now this spin generated magnetic field make the electron move sideways (Lorentz force).

Dodig,

If that were true, wouldn't the electrons eventually all pile up on one side of the magnet? But they don't; they're bound to individual atoms, which are themselves locked into place in the solid metal. A very high temperature, or a very large external magnetic field can erase the magnetization. But just keeping a stationary piece of iron from falling won't do it.
 
  • #9
jdavel said:
Dodig,

If that were true, wouldn't the electrons eventually all pile up on one side of the magnet? But they don't; they're bound to individual atoms, which are themselves locked into place in the solid metal. A very high temperature, or a very large external magnetic field can erase the magnetization. But just keeping a stationary piece of iron from falling won't do it.

I didn't think that way. What I meant is that the electron spin creates magnetic field. And this magnetic field is acting on all the moving charges in that field (including the electron itself). But if you look at the direction of Lorentz force, it does not make the electron go away from the atom (eventually, it could put it in higher orbit). So these electrons won't pile up, they may just revolve around the nuclei faster.
 
  • #10
Dodig said:
...So these electrons won't pile up, they may just revolve around the nuclei faster.

Well...it just doesn't work that way when you're talking about electrons confined to a volume the size of an atom! Their spin and orbital angular momentum take on fixed, discrete values that don't increase or decrease gradually. Either a big enough chunk of energy is absorbed (or emitted) to make the electron jump to a higher (or lower) energy level, which can increase (or decrease) its orbital angular momentum (but interestingly not its spin angular momentum!) or everything stays the way it is. Forever!
 
  • #11
So we have the force and the path thus electron does
work. That is why I think permanent magnets do work.

Okay, imagine the magnetic field of electron A doing work on another electron B as you describe (lets avoid the issue of self interaction).

Then the energy of electron B goes up by the same amount as electron A's energy goes down. That is:

[tex] W_{AB} = -W_{BA} [/tex]

So the net work done by the system is zero, because the electrons are only exchanging energy (not creating it). They are free to do this until the end of time.
 
  • #12
so by you saying it does not require work or energy, you mean like a space shuttle can continue forwards through a vacuum forever until a force is met of the correct properties to counteract that movement, as the electron particles are moving through a vacuum, their is no resistance from other particles, unless other particles are traveling on the same shell at different speeds, which as far as i know is not possible, and therefore does not require any form of interaction or conversion of energy
 
  • #13
jdavel said:
Well...it just doesn't work that way when you're talking about electrons confined to a volume the size of an atom! Their spin and orbital angular momentum take on fixed, discrete values that don't increase or decrease gradually. Either a big enough chunk of energy is absorbed (or emitted) to make the electron jump to a higher (or lower) energy level, which can increase (or decrease) its orbital angular momentum (but interestingly not its spin angular momentum!) or everything stays the way it is. Forever!

Yes you cannot use the macroscopic (or gradual icrease of the speed/energy) model to show that, I agree. But the start of the discussion was whether the magnet hanging from metal bar does work or not. And I think I've illustrated enough to show that work is done since you have the force with component in the direction of the path (F=v x B where v is the speed and B is the magnetic field due to the electron spin) and I don't think you can prove differently. So it may be that something more is going on :confused:
 
  • #14
Crosson said:
Okay, imagine the magnetic field of electron A doing work on another electron B as you describe (lets avoid the issue of self interaction).

Then the energy of electron B goes up by the same amount as electron A's energy goes down. That is:

[tex] W_{AB} = -W_{BA} [/tex]

So the net work done by the system is zero, because the electrons are only exchanging energy (not creating it). They are free to do this until the end of time.

Okay. But I was reffering exactly to the issue of self interaction. To clarify
this; the spin of the electron is exerting the force on itself by the means
of magnetic field which was created by the spin.

... at least that's what theory says o:)
 
  • #15
Dodig said:
...you have the force with component in the direction of the path (F=v x B where v is the speed and B is the magnetic field due to the electron spin) and I don't think you can prove differently...

What "path"? Electrons in atoms don't move in "paths". They just exist in orbitals which have associated with them discrete values of energy and angular momentum and a blurry indication of where the electron is likely to be located. The notion that work equals force times distance doesn't work on electrons in atoms. The "distance" is too small.
 
  • #16
jdavel said:
What "path"? Electrons in atoms don't move in "paths". They just exist in orbitals which have associated with them discrete values of energy and angular momentum and a blurry indication of where the electron is likely to be located. The notion that work equals force times distance doesn't work on electrons in atoms. The "distance" is too small.

Almost any path works so that issue is unimportant. If what you say is
true than the Lorentz force would be nonexistant at small distances.
 
  • #17
Dodig, I'm not quite sure what you're trying to say here.

Do you understand, or do you genuinely believe that physics as we know it is wrong?
 
  • #18
Dodig said:
Almost any path works so that issue is unimportant. If what you say is true than the Lorentz force would be nonexistant at small distances.

No more so than the Coulomb force alone. And in fact using the 1/r Coulomb potential that the 1/r^2 Coulomb force implies (classically) works just fine.
 
  • #19
brewnog said:
Dodig, I'm not quite sure what you're trying to say here.

Do you understand, or do you genuinely believe that physics as we know it is wrong?

I generally think physics is quite right about things. This is just one
little obstacle that bothers me :bugeye:
 
  • #20
Dodig said:
I generally think physics is quite right about things. This is just one
little obstacle that bothers me :bugeye:

Why does it bother you any more than a book resting on a table?
 
  • #21
Don't be sad.

All of you dummies are wrong:

In the case of the helicopter, there is work done to move the air to keep the helicopter aloft. The helicopter's engine supplies the power (work/time). In the case of the magnet on the iron bar, nothing is moving and there is no work done. There _is_ energy associated with the magnetic field, but it is not changing, and so there is no power being supplied by the magnet (or anything else in the problem).

Magnetic fields are not _only_ generated by moving charge. In this case, we have a permanent magnet which results from the alignment of the spins of the iron atoms.

Whoever said the thing about the book on the table was correct, but then he opened his mouth about electrons moving around or something.

-A
 
  • #22
if the magnet did stay attached to the iron bar, then wouldn't the iron bar itself float apart into little atoms? isn't the same force that holds the iron bar together partialy responsible for holding the magnet? I am not well educated but this is where you lead me :)
 
  • #23
it does not make the electron go away from the atom (eventually, it could put it in higher orbit). So these electrons won't pile up, they may just revolve around the nuclei faster.

but, the thing is, the magnetic force gives you a cross product. work done is a cross product. the magnetic force of other electrons on these electrons shouldn't speed anything up.
 

FAQ: Where Does Energy Come From When Hanging a Permanent Magnet?

Where does the energy come from to hang a permanent magnet?

The energy used to hang a permanent magnet comes from the gravitational potential energy of the magnet and the Earth's gravitational field. When the magnet is lifted, work is done against the force of gravity, converting potential energy into kinetic energy.

Why does a permanent magnet stick to a surface?

A permanent magnet sticks to a surface due to the magnetic force between the magnet and the material it is attracted to. This force is caused by the alignment of the magnetic domains within the magnet and the material, creating a magnetic attraction.

Can a permanent magnet lose its magnetism over time?

Yes, a permanent magnet can lose its magnetism over time due to a phenomenon called demagnetization. This can occur when the magnet is exposed to high temperatures, strong magnetic fields, or physical damage, causing the magnetic domains to become disordered and lose their alignment.

How is the energy of a permanent magnet replenished?

The energy of a permanent magnet is replenished through the process of magnetization. This occurs when the magnet is exposed to a strong magnetic field, causing the magnetic domains to realign and the magnet to regain its magnetic properties.

What are the benefits of using a permanent magnet as a source of energy?

One of the main benefits of using a permanent magnet as a source of energy is that it is a renewable and clean source, as it does not produce any harmful emissions. Additionally, permanent magnets have a long lifespan and can provide a continuous supply of energy without the need for fuel or maintenance.

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