The key idea
Magnetic field lines show the direction a north pole would move.
Use the labels to explain the scientific relationship shown.
The bit that matters
Short notes first. Learn the idea, then use the worked example and questions to check it properly.
Permanent and induced magnets
A permanent magnet produces its own magnetic field.An induced magnet is a material that becomes magnetic when placed in a magnetic field and loses most of its magnetism quickly when removed.Magnetic materials are always attracted to permanent magnets, whereas two permanent magnets can attract or repel.The magnetic forces between two magnets are non-contact forces.
Magnetic poles and field patterns
Every magnet has a north and a south pole, where the field is strongest. Like poles repel and unlike poles attract.A magnetic field is the region around a magnet where a force acts on another magnet or magnetic material.Field lines run from north to south outside the magnet, and the closer the lines, the stronger the field.
The magnetic field of a current
When a current flows through a wire it creates a magnetic field made of concentric circles around the wire.The direction of the field can be found using the right-hand grip rule, and reversing the current reverses the field direction.Increasing the current increases the strength of the field. The field is stronger closer to the wire.
Solenoids and electromagnets
Shaping a wire into a coil called a solenoid concentrates the magnetic field, producing a strong, uniform field inside that resembles the field of a bar magnet.Adding an iron core makes an electromagnet, which is much stronger and can be switched on and off.The strength can be increased by increasing the current, adding more turns, or using an iron core.Electromagnets are used in devices such as relays, scrapyard cranes and loudspeakers.
Definitions to learn
Permanent magnet
A magnet that produces its own magnetic field at all times.
Induced magnet
A material that becomes magnetic only when in a magnetic field.
Magnetic field
The region around a magnet where a force acts on a magnetic material.
Solenoid
A coil of wire that produces a strong, uniform magnetic field when carrying a current.
Electromagnet
A solenoid with an iron core whose magnetism can be switched on and off.
Describe the magnetic field around a bar magnet.
State the field-line direction.
Describe where the field is strongest.
Field lines go from north to south outside the magnet and are closest together near the poles.
Draw field lines with arrows from north to south.Lines must not cross and must be closer together near poles (stronger field).State whether a material is magnetic, magnetised, or non-magnetic precisely.
Do not draw field lines crossing.
How to score full marks
- 1Field lines always point from north to south and must never cross; draw arrows on them.
- 2To test whether something is a permanent magnet, check if it can repel — only magnets repel.
- 3List three ways to strengthen an electromagnet: more current, more turns, an iron core.
Try these yourself
Start with the core skill, then open the answer only after you have attempted the full question.
1Explain the difference between a permanent magnet and an induced magnet.
- 1.Compare whether magnetism remains.
2Where is the field strongest around a bar magnet?
- 1.Use field-line spacing.
3Explain why two north poles repel.
- 1.Use the interaction between like poles.
4State the rule for the forces between magnetic poles.[2 marks]
- 1.Like poles.
- 2.Unlike poles.
5Explain the difference between a permanent magnet and an induced magnet.[2 marks]
- 1.Permanent always magnetic.
- 2.Induced only in a field.
6Describe the shape and direction of the magnetic field around a straight current-carrying wire.[2 marks]
- 1.Concentric circles.
- 2.Direction from right-hand grip rule / reverses with current.
7State three ways to increase the strength of an electromagnet.[3 marks]
- 1.Increase current.
- 2.More turns.
- 3.Iron core.
8An electromagnet is used in a scrapyard crane to lift cars. Explain why an electromagnet is more suitable than a permanent magnet for this job, and explain how the field of a solenoid compares to that of a bar magnet.[4 marks]
- 1.Electromagnet can be switched off to release load.
- 2.Strength can be controlled.
- 3.Solenoid field uniform inside, like bar magnet.
- 4.Iron core increases strength.
9Explain how a magnetic compass works, referring to the Earth's magnetic field and the behaviour of a freely suspended magnet.[2 marks]
- 1.Earth has a magnetic field like a bar magnet.
- 2.The compass needle is a permanent magnet.
- 3.North pole of needle attracted to Earth's magnetic south (geographic north).
- 4.Needle aligns with Earth's field lines.
10A student holds a permanent bar magnet close to an iron nail and the nail is attracted. When the magnet is removed the nail falls away from it. Explain these observations using the idea of induced magnetism.[3 marks]
- 1.Iron nail becomes an induced magnet in the field of the bar magnet.
- 2.Opposite pole induced closest to bar magnet — attraction.
- 3.When bar magnet removed, iron loses its induced magnetism.
- 4.Iron does not retain magnetism because it is a soft magnetic material.
11Describe how you could use a small plotting compass to map the magnetic field around a bar magnet. Include what is plotted and how the field pattern around a north and south pole differs.[3 marks]
- 1.Place magnet on paper; place compass at one end.
- 2.Mark direction of compass needle; move compass to tip of arrow; repeat.
- 3.Join dots to form field lines with arrows.
- 4.Near north pole lines spread outward; near south they converge inward.
12A relay is an electromagnetic switch. Describe how it works, explaining the role of the electromagnet, the soft iron core and the spring contacts, and suggest a practical situation where a relay is useful.[4 marks]
- 1.Small current in control circuit energises electromagnet.
- 2.Electromagnet attracts soft iron armature.
- 3.Armature closes switch in high-current circuit.
- 4.When control current off, spring pulls armature back and opens switch.
- 5.Use: switching high-power circuits safely from low-power controls.