Magnetic Field (original) (raw)

Last Updated : 11 May, 2026

A magnetic field is an invisible region around a magnet, electric current, or moving charged particle where magnetic forces can be felt.

In electromagnetism, it’s described as a field that exerts forces on other moving charges and magnetic materials like iron.

magnetic_field_sources

Unit

The SI unit for the magnetic field is the tesla (T).

B-Field is measured in Tesla (T) while H-Field is measured in Ampere/meter (A/m).

In the CGS system, the unit of measurement for the B-field is the gauss (G) (1 T = 10000 G), while the H-field is measured in Oersted (Oe) (1 Oersted = 1000/4π A/m ≈ 79.577 A/m).

Magnetic Vector Field

A magnetic field is a vector field, meaning it has both magnitude and direction at every point in space and is represented by the vector B. The direction of the magnetic field at a point is given by the direction a north pole would move (from north to south outside the magnet).

The magnitude of the field is indicated by the length of the vector, while its orientation shows the direction of the magnetic field at that point.

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Magnetic Field Lines

Another representation of the magnetic field can be done using the magnetic field lines, which are shown in the figure below. The strength of the magnetic field is shown here by the closeness of magnetic field lines.

MagneticFieldLines

**Example: The magnetic field is stronger at the poles because the lines are more crowded in that area.

**Properties

Magnetic Field Intensity

B = \mu (H + M)