A Radi, HafezO Rasmussen, John2020-02-152020-02-152013Print ISBN 978-3-642-23025-7Online ISBN 978-3-642-23026-4https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23026-4_25https://t.ly/dNnZLMSA Google ScholarIt is of common knowledge that every magnet attracts pieces of iron and has two poles: a north pole (N) and a south pole (S). In addition, given two magnets, like poles (N–N or S–S) repel each other, and opposite poles (N–S) attract each other. Moreover, if we cut a magnet in half, we do not obtain isolated north and south poles. Instead, we get two magnets, each with its own north and south pole.enMagnetic FieldMagnetic ForceSouth PoleUniform Magnetic FieldMagnetic Dipole MomentMagnetic FieldsBook chapterhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-23026-4_25