What Is Electromagnetism?
Electromagnetism is the branch of physics that describes the interactions between electric charges and currents, the fields they produce, and how those fields propagate as electromagnetic waves. It is one of the four fundamental forces of nature — and by far the most important for everyday human experience.
Every chemical bond, every light source, every electronic device, every magnetic compass — all governed by electromagnetism. Unlike classical mechanics, which describes the motion of objects under forces, electromagnetism describes the forces themselves at a deeper level, through fields that permeate space.
The great unification came in the 1860s when James Clerk Maxwell showed that electricity and magnetism weren't separate phenomena but aspects of one unified force, described by four elegant equations. As a bonus, those equations predicted the existence of electromagnetic waves traveling at the speed of light — and thereby identified light as an electromagnetic phenomenon. (Source: Maxwell, 1865)
Electric Charge and Coulomb's Law
Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter, coming in two types — positive and negative — with like charges repelling and unlike charges attracting. The unit of charge is the coulomb (C); the elementary charge is e = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ C.
The force between two point charges was quantified by Charles-Augustin de Coulomb in 1785:
k = 8.99 × 10⁹ N·m²/C² (Coulomb's constant) | q₁, q₂ = charges | r = separation distance
Coulomb's law has the same mathematical form as Newton's law of gravitation — both are inverse-square laws. But there's a crucial difference: gravity is always attractive, while the electric force can be attractive (opposite charges) or repulsive (like charges). This is what makes matter stable — the repulsion between like-charged electrons prevents matter from collapsing.
Compare the magnitude: the electric force between a proton and electron in a hydrogen atom is about 10³⁹ times stronger than the gravitational force between them. Electromagnetism utterly dominates at atomic scales.
Electric Fields and Electric Potential
An electric field E is the force per unit positive charge at any point in space: E = F/q. Fields allow us to describe electromagnetic effects without referring to specific source charges — a powerful abstraction.
E = electric field (N/C or V/m) | F = force on test charge q | Q = source charge | r = distance from Q
Electric potential V (measured in volts) is the potential energy per unit charge: V = PE/q = kQ/r. Voltage is always a difference — the "voltage" of a 9V battery means its positive terminal is 9 joules per coulomb higher in potential than its negative terminal.
Electric field lines visualize the field: they point in the direction of force on a positive test charge, are denser where the field is stronger, and never cross. A uniform field (between parallel plates) has parallel, evenly spaced field lines — the configuration in capacitors.
DC Circuits and Ohm's Law
Ohm's Law states that the current through a conductor is proportional to the voltage across it and inversely proportional to its resistance: V = IR. This simple relationship governs the behavior of most practical electrical circuits.
V = voltage (volts) | I = current (amperes) | R = resistance (ohms, Ω)
Electric power — the rate of energy transfer — is P = IV = I²R = V²/R. A 60W light bulb on a 120V circuit draws I = P/V = 0.5 A of current.
| Configuration | Resistance | Current | Voltage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Series resistors | R_total = R₁ + R₂ + ... | Same through all | Splits across resistors |
| Parallel resistors | 1/R_total = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + ... | Splits across branches | Same across all |
Kirchhoff's laws extend circuit analysis: the Junction Rule (currents sum to zero at any node, conservation of charge) and the Loop Rule (voltages sum to zero around any closed loop, conservation of energy). Together with Ohm's Law, they can solve any linear circuit.
Magnetic Fields and Forces
A magnetic field B exerts a force on moving charges and current-carrying conductors. The Lorentz force on a charge q moving at velocity v in field B is F = qv × B — the force is perpendicular to both v and B.
Force is perpendicular to both velocity and magnetic field — so it does no work, only changes direction.
This perpendicularity is crucial: magnetic forces curve charged particles but don't speed them up or slow them down. That's why particle accelerators use magnetic fields to steer particles and electric fields to accelerate them.
Current-carrying wires also experience magnetic forces — the basis of every electric motor. Two parallel wires carrying currents in the same direction attract; in opposite directions, they repel. This is actually the definition of the SI unit ampere.
Magnetic field sources include permanent magnets (aligned magnetic moments of electrons) and moving charges (currents). There are no magnetic monopoles — every magnet has both a north and south pole. This asymmetry between electricity (isolated charges exist) and magnetism (isolated poles don't) is one of Maxwell's equations.
Faraday's Law of Induction
Faraday's Law states that a changing magnetic flux through a loop induces an electromotive force (EMF) in that loop: EMF = −dΦ/dt. This is the principle behind every electric generator ever built — and the reason you have grid electricity.
EMF = induced voltage | Φ_B = magnetic flux through the loop | The minus sign (Lenz's Law): induced current opposes the change.
A generator rotates a coil in a magnetic field, continuously changing the flux through the coil, and producing an alternating EMF. The faster it rotates, the higher the frequency and amplitude of the induced voltage. Every power plant — coal, nuclear, wind, hydro — uses this principle.
Lenz's Law (the minus sign) says the induced current creates a field opposing the change that caused it — nature's electromagnetic inertia. Drop a magnet through a copper pipe: eddy currents form, creating a magnetic field opposing the magnet's motion, slowing its fall. It's Faraday + Lenz in action.
Maxwell's Equations: The Complete Theory
James Clerk Maxwell assembled the entire theory of electromagnetism into four equations. Together, they describe all electric and magnetic phenomena — and predict the existence of electromagnetic waves traveling at c.
∇·E = ρ/ε₀
Gauss's Law for E: Electric field lines originate from charges. Charge is the source of electric fields.
∇·B = 0
Gauss's Law for B: Magnetic field lines form closed loops — there are no magnetic monopoles.
∇×E = −∂B/∂t
Faraday's Law: A changing magnetic field induces an electric field (generates EMF).
∇×B = μ₀J + μ₀ε₀∂E/∂t
Ampère-Maxwell Law: Currents and changing electric fields produce magnetic fields.
Maxwell added the "displacement current" term (μ₀ε₀∂E/∂t) to Ampère's original law — this was the key insight. It meant that a changing electric field produces a magnetic field, which produces a changing electric field, which produces a magnetic field... a self-sustaining wave propagating through empty space at c = 1/√(ε₀μ₀) ≈ 3×10⁸ m/s.
Light is an electromagnetic wave. Maxwell proved it with algebra — no experiment needed. It's one of the great moments in scientific history.
Electromagnetic Waves and Light
Maxwell's equations predict waves of oscillating electric and magnetic fields, perpendicular to each other and to the direction of propagation, traveling at c = 299,792,458 m/s in vacuum. These are electromagnetic waves — and visible light occupies a tiny slice of the full EM spectrum (400–700 nm wavelength).
For the full electromagnetic spectrum — from radio waves to gamma rays — see our Waves & Oscillations guide. For optics — reflection, refraction, lenses — see the Optics section. For quantum aspects of light (photons), see Modern Physics.
Electromagnetism vs Gravity
| Property | Electromagnetism | Gravity |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Electric charge | Mass/energy |
| Type | Attractive & repulsive | Attractive only |
| Relative strength | ~10³⁶× stronger (atomic scale) | Weakest fundamental force |
| Range | Infinite (1/r²) | Infinite (1/r²) |
| Carrier particle | Photon | Graviton (theoretical) |
| Dominant at | Atomic/molecular scale | Large masses, cosmic scale |
Electromagnetism dominates chemistry and biology because it operates between charges; gravity wins at cosmic scales because large masses accumulate and charge tends to be neutral in bulk matter.
Common Misconceptions
- "Electricity and magnetism are separate forces." They are unified — special relativity shows that magnetic fields arise from electric fields when charges are in relative motion.
- "Current flows at the speed of light." The signal (electromagnetic wave) propagates near c; individual electrons drift slowly (~mm/s) through the wire.
- "Grounding is dangerous." In electrical safety, grounding protects by providing a low-resistance path for fault currents — it's generally protective, not dangerous.
- "Magnets attract all metals." Only ferromagnetic metals (iron, nickel, cobalt, gadolinium) are strongly attracted by magnets. Aluminum, copper, and gold are not.
- "Higher voltage means more current." Current depends on both voltage and resistance (I = V/R). High voltage with very high resistance produces low current.
Real-World Applications
- Electric motors and generators: Virtually all mechanical power in modern civilization is converted to or from electricity using Faraday's law — in motors (electrical → mechanical) and generators (mechanical → electrical).
- MRI machines: Magnetic resonance imaging uses powerful superconducting magnets and radio-frequency EM pulses to image soft tissue without ionizing radiation.
- Wireless communication: Every WiFi signal, cell call, and GPS reading is an EM wave. Maxwell's equations govern how antennas emit and receive them.
- Semiconductors: Transistors in every computer chip operate by controlling electron flow through electric fields — solid-state electromagnetism at nanometer scales.
- Transformers: AC power transmission uses electromagnetic induction to step voltages up for efficient long-distance transmission and back down for safe home use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Summary & Next Steps
Electromagnetism governs the interactions of electric charges through fields that carry energy and momentum. Coulomb's law describes static charges; Faraday's law describes induction; Ohm's law governs circuits; and Maxwell's four equations unify everything — predicting electromagnetic waves as a natural consequence.
This is arguably the most consequential branch of physics for civilization: every electrical device, every communication system, every light source operates on electromagnetic principles.
Continue Learning
- Waves & Oscillations — The full EM spectrum and wave properties of light
- Optics — Reflection, refraction, lenses, and interference of light
- Modern Physics — Quantum electrodynamics: the quantum theory of light and charges
- Classical Mechanics — Newton's laws and the forces that EM explains at a deeper level
References: [1] Maxwell, J.C. (1865). A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. [2] Faraday, M. (1831). Experimental Researches in Electricity. [3] Griffiths, D.J. (2017). Introduction to Electrodynamics, 4th ed. Cambridge University Press.