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4 answers

Yes, there is. Any moving charge will produce a magnetic field. A positive charge just produces one that is oritented the opposite direction of one produced by a negative charge.

2006-10-01 13:43:31 · answer #1 · answered by mathematician 7 · 0 0

Only negative charges create a magnetic field when in motion. However, protons have a plus charge and can be acted on by magnetism even though they don't create a field. One reason we can accelerate protons around a cyclotron etc. is because of that plus charge, which interacts with the magnetic fields generated by the cyclotron. [See source.]

2006-10-01 07:08:16 · answer #2 · answered by oldprof 7 · 0 2

Speaking from the electrical engineering point of view there is always a magnetic field associated with moving electrical particles, regardless of whether they are electrons or protons.

2006-10-01 07:00:00 · answer #3 · answered by rscanner 6 · 2 1

learn have shown that populations placed close to to extreme voltage strains have an abnormally great sort of leukemia, lymphoma or different maximum cancers situations. that's sufficiently great that the government did a great learn around the situation, their end?? They suggested that the numbers have been too extreme to declare they have been coincidental. So, understanding that your physique is ninety% water (an extremely reliable conductor of electricity) and that electricity is leaping into your physique, i might say that's certainly affecting you. you in easy terms won't know how for yet another 10 years or so.

2016-12-12 18:28:27 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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