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Science

Monopoles and Magnetricity 67

szotz writes "Although there was once a hint from a cosmic ray experiment (on Valentine's Day, no less), no one's found any solid evidence of monopoles (unpaired north and south magnets) flying around the cosmos. But physicists did find monopole-like quasiparticles in some exotic crystals in 2009. One of the discoverers has an article this month in IEEE Spectrum that looks at how the particles were found and what's happened since. They might seem like a wacky curiosity, but the author says we shouldn't write them off — they might one day make useful new 'magnetronic' devices."
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Monopoles and Magnetricity

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  • by djupedal ( 584558 ) on Friday August 02, 2013 @07:50PM (#44462531)
    Dr. Sheldon Cooper already explained all this...
    • well, yeah, but that doesn't deter /.
    • Wasn't it that he started to get into it in a phone interview, but that was when Kripke pranked him and filled his office with helium?

      So he never got to finish explaining it.

      Or is my episodic memory incorrect?

      • Wasn't it that he started to get into it in a phone interview, but that was when Kripke pranked him and filled his office with helium?

        So he never got to finish explaining it.

        Or is my episodic memory incorrect?

        I couldn't tell if he stopped talking, or if his voice just shifted up beyond my range...
        Was there something about a "nozzle" involved in monopoles?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Microsoft is a convicted monopole, aren't they?

  • Larry Niven has gone into a great deal of theoretical depth on monopoles. Worth reading
    • by Anonymous Coward
      No, he hasn't. He went into a great deal of fantasy and daydreams.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 02, 2013 @08:34PM (#44462693)

    Requires Superstring Theory, Silksteel Alloys
    Leads to Nanominiaturization, Unified Field Theory

    • And quantum theory! [wondermark.com]
    • A step closer to singularity laser mounted shark!
    • Re:Monopole Magnets (Score:5, Informative)

      by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Saturday August 03, 2013 @02:22AM (#44463789) Journal
      Pierre Curie pointed out the possibility of magnetic monopoles in 1894 based solely on Maxwell's equations which was close to a century before Superstring theory was on the scene. In fact in 1931 Dirac showed they could be used to quantize charge using nothing but relativistic quantum mechanics and Maxwell's equations. So monopoles actually only require Maxwell's equations and would lead to an explanation of why charge is quantized. It may come as a shock but the real world does not play like Alpha Centauri (and considering what happened to Earth in that game that's a good thing!).
      • Re:Monopole Magnets (Score:5, Informative)

        by Noughmad ( 1044096 ) <miha.cancula@gmail.com> on Saturday August 03, 2013 @03:19AM (#44463909) Homepage

        So monopoles actually only require Maxwell's equations and would lead to an explanation of why charge is quantized.

        Not, not really. Maxwell's equations, in the known form, do not allow for magnetic monopoles. They are explicitly forbidden by "div B = 0". However, they could very easily be changed (symmetrized - so they would look the same for electric and magnetic fields) to account for them.

        So just from Maxwell's equation you can't disprove the existence of monopoles, but you can't prove them either.

        • Maxwell's equations, in the known form, do not allow for magnetic monopoles.

          Adding the possibility for a non-zero magnetic charge into Maxwell's equations does not stop them being Maxwell's equations anymore than changing the value of the permittivity of free space due to a more accurate measurement would stop them being Maxwell's equations. The zero in 'div B = 0' is an experimentally observed number and not fundamental to the theory in the same way that the CP violating term in QCD is experimentally observed to be zero or the right handed coupling of the weak force is observed t

    • And permits building magtubes, don't forget that.

  • by AdamHaun ( 43173 ) on Friday August 02, 2013 @08:38PM (#44462711) Journal

    Question for any physicists in the audience: I have long heard that magnetic forces can be described as relativistic effects of classical electricity (here, for instance [wikipedia.org]). How do magnetic monopoles fit into this? Are they are purely quantum mechanics/QFT concept, or is there some way to describe them classically that makes it clear why so many people are expecting to find them?

    • by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Friday August 02, 2013 @08:58PM (#44462795)

      According to special relativity, magnetic and electric fields can be "mixed" by Lorentz boosts (i.e. moving from one inertial reference frame to another that is moving with respect to the first one.) As a result, some say that a magnetic field is nothing more than an electric field as viewed by a moving observer. That isn't quite correct. The quantity E^2-B^2 (the square of the electric field minus the square of the magnetic field) is a Lorentz invariant. It is the same according to all observers. That means that if the magnitude of the electric (or magnetic) field is greater than the magnitude of the magnetic (or electric) field in one frame of reference, it is in all frames of reference. So a purely magnetic field can never be described as a purely electric field as seen by a moving observer.

      In particular, Maxwell's equations, if valid in one inertial frame of reference, are valid in all frames. One of Maxwell's equations is div B = 0, which says there are no magnetic monopoles. A violation of this equation in one reference frame would be seen as a violation in all frames. That is a magnetic monopole in one frame of reference would be seen as a magnetic monopole in all frames of reference, despite the fact that in frames in which it is moving, it will generate an electric, as well as magnetic field, just as an electric charge, when moving, produces a magnetic field as well as an electric field.

      • I think the parent was talking about quantum theory applied to electromagnetism (weak nuclear forces are combined too) and what you describe are the classical/relativistic equations of Maxwell.

        I seem to remember that there actually is a reason why monopoles should exist with a unified theory of electromagnetism/weak force/quantum menchanics/relativity to describe a particular phenominon to the greatest degree of numerical accuracy, but unfortunately I just can't remember what that is. I seem to remember tha

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday August 02, 2013 @09:47PM (#44462975) Homepage Journal

      As a followup to the excellent relativistic answer above...

      As one of my professors put it: "if there is one monopole anywhere, then charge is quantized everywhere". This was at the end of a fairly straightforward derivation, first done by Paul Dirac IIRC.

      We see by experiment that charge is quantized everywhere, but this doesn't prove the existence of monopoles. It's a tantalizing clue to why things may be the way they are in our universe.

      Monopoles are predicted by some of the unified theories, so if they exist how come we don't see any?

      • Because our compasses can't point to them. They just spin and spin...
        • Because our compasses can't point to them. They just spin and spin...

          Actually, no. Our compasses would point to them, the same way a water molecule, which has no electric charge but does have an electric dipole moment, tends to align itself to the electric field generated by ions in a solution.

      • Monopoles are predicted by some of the unified theories, so if they exist how come we don't see any?

        ...because there is no constraint on their mass. They could be anywhere up to the Planck scale which is 15 orders of magnitude higher in energy than the LHC. To have a hope of seeing anything at that scale you have to look for processes which the new physics allows but which current physics forbids so you have a chance to see virtual particle exchange but the energy is so staggeringly high that even this is unlikely.

        For example proton decay might be possible through hypothesized X and Y bosons which hav

      • Monopoles are predicted by some of the unified theories, so if they exist how come we don't see any?

        I think the standard explanation for this is cosmic inflation [wikipedia.org] combined with a high monopole mass.

        Inflation, which is hypothesized to have happened very early in the history of the universe, makes the universe expand extremely quickly in a very short period of time, which has the effect of diluting all the particle content in the universe prior to inflation into insignificance. At the end of inflation, the energy that drove the expansion is converted into particles, re-populating the universe with matter.

        But

    • How do magnetic monopoles fit into this?

      Magnetic monopoles could be the mechanism by which charge is quantized. Dirac showed in 1931 that if monopoles exist then charge, quite naturally [wikipedia.org] becomes quantized through the fact that angular momentum is quantized. Unfortunately Dirac's mechanism puts no mass limits on real monopoles (i.e. not the condensed matter faked kind) but there is an experiment (MoEDAL) [web.cern.ch] being run by a colleague of mine which is searching for evidence of monopole production at the LHC. However, if they exist, they could lie anywhe

    • Electromagnetism as described by Maxwell's equations and special (not general) relativity are equivalent, you can derive one from the other.

      Maxwell's equations forbid monopoles, one of the interconnected equations says magnetic fields have no sources or sinks. So classically we expect NOT to find them.

      These "quasi-monopoles" found in condensed matter physics are not the same nor are they related to true particle monopoles.the quasi-monopoles really are a type of dipole.

      The true monopoles are predicted by

  • I maintain nonetheless that yin-yang dualism can be overcome.

    With sufficient enlightenment we can give substance to any
    distinction: mind without body, north without south, pleasure
    without pain. Remember, enlightenment is a function of willpower,
    not of physical strength.

    —Chairman Sheng-ji Yang,
    “Essays on Mind and Matter”
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Good for you sir, for laying down the SM:AC talk!

  • Define "useful" (Score:4, Informative)

    by Wonko the Sane ( 25252 ) * on Saturday August 03, 2013 @02:07AM (#44463751) Journal
    I'm sure monopole-like virtual particles are cool and all, but the article is very light on describing what exactly what the ability to produce magnetic current means in practical terms.
  • All theories are useful hallucinations and nothing more. The map is not the territory. Each useful map will only take you to certain limited portions of the territory. I think that what Ed had going for him more than anything was that he had no map to start with.
  • We must stop this dangerous research before hoards of roaming bandits start falling up! It's unconstitutional and immoral, I'm telling ya.

  • what happens when there's a magnetic power outage?

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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