The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality

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Authors: Brian Greene
Tags: science, Cosmology, Physics, Astronomy, Popular works, Universe
device that remains outside your body can take a detailed picture of your insides? When you look at a compass, how is it that the needle swings around and points north even though nothing seems to nudge it? The familiar answer to the last question invokes the earth's magnetic field, and the concept of magnetic fields helps to explain the previous two examples as well.
    I've never seen a better way to get a visceral sense of a magnetic field than the elementary school demonstration in which iron filings are sprinkled in the vicinity of a bar magnet. After a little shaking, the iron filings align themselves in an orderly pattern of arcs that begin at the magnet's north pole and swing up and around, to end at the magnet's south pole, as in Figure 3.1. The pattern traced by the iron filings is direct evidence that the magnet creates an invisible something that permeates the space around it—a something that can, for example, exert a force on shards of metal. The invisible something is the
magnetic field
and, to our intuition, it resembles a mist or essence that can fill a region of space and thereby exert a force beyond the physical extent of the magnet itself. A magnetic field provides a magnet what an army provides a dictator and what auditors provide the IRS: influence beyond their physical boundaries, which allows force to be exerted out in the "field." That is why a magnetic field is also called a force field.

    Figure 3.1 Iron filings sprinkled near a bar magnet trace out its magnetic field.
    It is the pervasive, space-filling capability of magnetic fields that makes them so useful. An airport metal detector's magnetic field seeps through your clothes and causes metallic objects to give off their own magnetic fields—fields that then exert an influence back on the detector, causing its alarm to sound. An MRI's magnetic field seeps into your body, causing particular atoms to gyrate in just the right way to generate their own magnetic fields—fields that the machine can detect and decode into a picture of internal tissues. The earth's magnetic field seeps through the compass casing and turns the needle, causing it to point along an arc that, as a result of eons-long geophysical processes, is aligned in a nearly south-north direction.
    Magnetic fields are one familiar kind of field, but Faraday also analyzed another: the
electric field.
This is the field that causes your wool scarf to crackle, zaps your hand in a carpeted room when you touch a metal doorknob, and makes your skin tingle when you're up in the mountains during a powerful lightning storm. And if you happened to examine a compass during such a storm, the way its magnetic needle deflected this way and that as the bolts of electric lightning flashed nearby would have given you a hint of a deep interconnection between electric and magnetic fields—something first discovered by the Danish physicist Hans Oersted and investigated thoroughly by Faraday through painstaking experimentation. Just as developments in the stock market can affect the bond market which can then affect the stock market, and so on, these scientists found that changes in an electric field can produce changes in a nearby magnetic field, which can then cause changes in the electric field, and so on. Maxwell found the mathematical underpinnings of these interrelationships, and because his equations showed that electric and magnetic fields are as entwined as the fibers in a Rastafarian's dreadlocks, they were eventually christened
electromagnetic
fields, and the influence they exert the
electromagnetic
force.
    Today, we are constantly immersed in a sea of electromagnetic fields. Your cellular telephone and car radio work over enormous expanses because the electromagnetic fields broadcast by telephone companies and radio stations suffuse impressively wide regions of space. The same goes for wireless Internet connections; computers can pluck the entire World Wide Web from electromagnetic fields

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