Physics, asked by rohitkumar1528, 1 year ago

Does a rotating magnetic monopole have electric and magnetic moment in classical view?

Answers

Answered by traplord
0

No, the electron dipole moment is very small, 10−38 e.cm, and it's only nonzero because of CP-violation. If there are new sources of CP-violation, it may be slightly larger - but just notice that the displacement distance is just 10−38 centimeters, shorter than the Planck length, tiny. Without fancy things like CP-violation, the electron has no electric dipole moment, and the same thing would hold for a macroscopic rotating magnetic monopole

Answered by GhaintMunda45
0

Nuclear magnetic moment, some have electronic magnetic moment. Every atom has an electron and proton, therefore every atom has a MM attraction.

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