The field having constant field strength and direction at all points is
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uniform magnetic field lines
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Uniform Magnetic Field
Explanation:
- Around a magnet or a wire carrying a gentle electrical phenomenon in one direction, the flux is stationary and brought up as a magnetostatic field.
- At any given point its magnitude and direction remain the identical. Around an electrical energy or a fluctuating electrical energy, the force field is continuously changing its magnitude and direction.
- Magnetic fields could also be represented by continuous lines of force or magnetic flux that emerge from north-seeking magnetic poles and enter south-seeking magnetic poles.
- The density of the lines indicates the magnitude of the field of force. At the poles of a magnet, as an example, where the flux is robust, the sector lines are crowded together, or more dense. Farther away, where the field is weak, they diffuse, becoming less dense. a regular field is represented by equally spaced parallel straight lines.
- The direction of the flux is that the direction within which the positive magnetic pole of alittle magnet points.
- For a magnet, they emerge from the positive magnetic pole, spread out and around, enter the magnet at the negative pole, and continue through the magnet to the pole, where they again emerge.
- The SI unit for magnetic flux is that the weber. the quantity of webers may be a measure of the overall number of field lines that cross a given area.
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