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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!newsserver.sfu.ca!rs13-annex3.sfu.ca!palmer
- From: Leigh Palmer <palmer@sfu.ca>
- Subject: Re: Home made monopoles
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.053404.8679@sfu.ca>
- X-Xxmessage-Id: <A78CB057B3011C1B@rs13-annex3.sfu.ca>
- X-Xxdate: Wed, 27 Jan 93 05:34:15 GMT
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University
- X-Useragent: Nuntius v1.1.1d16
- References: <728137681.AA00483@cheswicks.toadnet.org>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 05:34:04 GMT
- Lines: 20
-
- In article <mcirvin.728156163@husc.harvard.edu> Matt McIrvin,
- mcirvin@husc8.harvard.edu writes:
-
- >One or the other. The idea was essentially to make a spherical
- >shell out of magnetic dipoles. In the limit of an infinitely
- >rigid sphere and infinitely robust dipoles, pushing the hemispheres
- >together would take an infinite amount of energy; the force you
- >need diverges as the edges get closer. A real hemisphere is only
- >finitely strong and is made of stuff whose magnetic dipoles will
- >reorient if the energy difference is large enough. So at some
- >point, either a hemisphere will break or the field will leak
- >through the surface (probably the latter, I'd guess).
-
- I don't know how you obtained that "infinite energy" solution. It is
- certainly incorrect. The correct solution, B = 0 everywhere, is the only
- spherically symmetric solution to div B = 0, has been posted elsewhere in
- this group. No superstrong materials are required, but the thing is
- practically infeasible, cute though it would be.
-
- Leigh
-