Force acting on charged particles in electric and magnetic fields
In physics, specifically in electromagnetism, the Lorentz force law is the combination of electric and magnetic force on a point charge due to electromagnetic fields. The Lorentz force, on the other hand, is a physical effect that occurs in the vicinity of electrically neutral, current-carrying conductors causing moving electrical charges to experience a magnetic force.
The Lorentz force law states that a particle of charge q moving with a velocity v in an electric fieldE and a magnetic fieldB experiences a force (in SI units[1][2]) of
It says that the electromagnetic force on a charge q is a combination of (1) a force in the direction of the electric field E (proportional to the magnitude of the field and the quantity of charge), and (2) a force at right angles to both the magnetic field B and the velocity v of the charge (proportional to the magnitude of the field, the charge, and the velocity).
Variations on this basic formula describe the magnetic force on a current-carrying wire (sometimes called Laplace force), the electromotive force in a wire loop moving through a magnetic field (an aspect of Faraday's law of induction), and the force on a moving charged particle.[3]
Historians suggest that the law is implicit in a paper by James Clerk Maxwell, published in 1865.[4]Hendrik Lorentz arrived at a complete derivation in 1895,[5] identifying the contribution of the electric force a few years after Oliver Heaviside correctly identified the contribution of the magnetic force.[6]
Lorentz force law as the definition of E and B
Trajectory of a particle with a positive or negative charge q under the influence of a magnetic field B, which is directed perpendicularly out of the screen
Beam of electrons moving in a circle, due to the presence of a magnetic field. Purple light revealing the electron's path in this Teltron tube is created by the electrons colliding with gas molecules.
In many textbook treatments of classical electromagnetism, the Lorentz force law is used as the definition of the electric and magnetic fields E and B.[7][8][9] To be specific, the Lorentz force is understood to be the following empirical statement:
The electromagnetic force F on a test charge at a given point and time is a certain function of its charge q and velocity v, which can be parameterized by exactly two vectors E and B, in the functional form:
This is valid, even for particles approaching the speed of light (that is, magnitude of v, |v| ≈ c).[10] So the two vector fieldsE and B are thereby defined throughout space and time, and these are called the "electric field" and "magnetic field". The fields are defined everywhere in space and time with respect to what force a test charge would receive regardless of whether a charge is present to experience the force.
Physical interpretation of the Lorentz force
Coulomb's law is only valid for point charges at rest. In fact, the electromagnetic force between two point charges depends not only on the distance but also on the relative velocity. For small relative velocities and very small accelerations, instead of the Coulomb force, the Weber force can be applied. The sum of the Weber forces of all charge carriers in a closed DC loop on a single test charge produces – regardless of the shape of the current loop – the Lorentz force.
The interpretation of magnetism by means of a modified Coulomb law was first proposed by Carl Friedrich Gauss. In 1835, Gauss assumed that each segment of a DC loop contains an equal number of negative and positive point charges that move at different speeds.[11] If Coulomb's law were completely correct, no force should act between any two short segments of such current loops. However, around 1825, André-Marie Ampère demonstrated experimentally that this is not the case. Ampère also formulated a force law. Based on this law, Gauss concluded that the electromagnetic force between two point charges depends not only on the distance but also on the relative velocity.
The force F acting on a particle of electric chargeq with instantaneous velocity v, due to an external electric field E and magnetic field B, is given by (SI definition of quantities[1]):[12]
where × is the vector cross product (all boldface quantities are vectors). In terms of Cartesian components, we have:
In general, the electric and magnetic fields are functions of the position and time. Therefore, explicitly, the Lorentz force can be written as:
in which r is the position vector of the charged particle, t is time, and the overdot is a time derivative.
A positively charged particle will be accelerated in the same linear orientation as the E field, but will curve perpendicularly to both the instantaneous velocity vector v and the B field according to the right-hand rule (in detail, if the fingers of the right hand are extended to point in the direction of v and are then curled to point in the direction of B, then the extended thumb will point in the direction of F).
The term qE is called the electric force, while the term q(v × B) is called the magnetic force.[13] According to some definitions, the term "Lorentz force" refers specifically to the formula for the magnetic force,[14] with the total electromagnetic force (including the electric force) given some other (nonstandard) name. This article will not follow this nomenclature: In what follows, the term Lorentz force will refer to the expression for the total force.
The magnetic force component of the Lorentz force manifests itself as the force that acts on a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field. In that context, it is also called the Laplace force.
The Lorentz force is a force exerted by the electromagnetic field on the charged particle, that is, it is the rate at which linear momentum is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle. Associated with it is the power which is the rate at which energy is transferred from the electromagnetic field to the particle. That power is
Notice that the magnetic field does not contribute to the power because the magnetic force is always perpendicular to the velocity of the particle.
Continuous charge distribution
For a continuous charge distribution in motion, the Lorentz force equation becomes:
where is the force on a small piece of the charge distribution with charge . If both sides of this equation are divided by the volume of this small piece of the charge distribution , the result is:
where is the force density (force per unit volume) and is the charge density (charge per unit volume). Next, the current density corresponding to the motion of the charge continuum is
so the continuous analogue to the equation is[15]
The total force is the volume integral over the charge distribution:
In terms of and , another way to write the Lorentz force (per unit volume) is[15]
where is the speed of light and ∇· denotes the divergence of a tensor field. Rather than the amount of charge and its velocity in electric and magnetic fields, this equation relates the energy flux (flow of energy per unit time per unit distance) in the fields to the force exerted on a charge distribution. See Covariant formulation of classical electromagnetism for more details.
The density of power associated with the Lorentz force in a material medium is
If we separate the total charge and total current into their free and bound parts, we get that the density of the Lorentz force is
where: is the density of free charge; is the polarization density; is the density of free current; and is the magnetization density. In this way, the Lorentz force can explain the torque applied to a permanent magnet by the magnetic field. The density of the associated power is
Formulation in the Gaussian system
The above-mentioned formulae use the conventions for the definition of the electric and magnetic field used with the SI, which is the most common. However, other conventions with the same physics (i.e. forces on e.g. an electron) are possible and used. In the conventions used with the older CGS-Gaussian units, which are somewhat more common among some theoretical physicists as well as condensed matter experimentalists, one has instead
where c is the speed of light. Although this equation looks slightly different, it is equivalent, since one has the following relations:[1]
where ε0 is the vacuum permittivity and μ0 the vacuum permeability. In practice, the subscripts "G" and "SI" are omitted, and the used convention (and unit) must be determined from context.
History
Early attempts to quantitatively describe the electromagnetic force were made in the mid-18th century. It was proposed that the force on magnetic poles, by Johann Tobias Mayer and others in 1760,[16] and electrically charged objects, by Henry Cavendish in 1762,[17] obeyed an inverse-square law. However, in both cases the experimental proof was neither complete nor conclusive. It was not until 1784 when Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, using a torsion balance, was able to definitively show through experiment that this was true.[18] Soon after the discovery in 1820 by Hans Christian Ørsted that a magnetic needle is acted on by a voltaic current, André-Marie Ampère that same year was able to devise through experimentation the formula for the angular dependence of the force between two current elements.[19][20] In all these descriptions, the force was always described in terms of the properties of the matter involved and the distances between two masses or charges rather than in terms of electric and magnetic fields.[21]
The modern concept of electric and magnetic fields first arose in the theories of Michael Faraday, particularly his idea of lines of force, later to be given full mathematical description by Lord Kelvin and James Clerk Maxwell.[22] From a modern perspective it is possible to identify in Maxwell's 1865 formulation of his field equations a form of the Lorentz force equation in relation to electric currents,[4] although in the time of Maxwell it was not evident how his equations related to the forces on moving charged objects. J. J. Thomson was the first to attempt to derive from Maxwell's field equations the electromagnetic forces on a moving charged object in terms of the object's properties and external fields. Interested in determining the electromagnetic behavior of the charged particles in cathode rays, Thomson published a paper in 1881 wherein he gave the force on the particles due to an external magnetic field as[6][23]
Thomson derived the correct basic form of the formula, but, because of some miscalculations and an incomplete description of the displacement current, included an incorrect scale-factor of a half in front of the formula. Oliver Heaviside invented the modern vector notation and applied it to Maxwell's field equations; he also (in 1885 and 1889) had fixed the mistakes of Thomson's derivation and arrived at the correct form of the magnetic force on a moving charged object.[6][24][25] Finally, in 1895,[5][26]Hendrik Lorentz derived the modern form of the formula for the electromagnetic force which includes the contributions to the total force from both the electric and the magnetic fields. Lorentz began by abandoning the Maxwellian descriptions of the ether and conduction. Instead, Lorentz made a distinction between matter and the luminiferous aether and sought to apply the Maxwell equations at a microscopic scale. Using Heaviside's version of the Maxwell equations for a stationary ether and applying Lagrangian mechanics (see below), Lorentz arrived at the correct and complete form of the force law that now bears his name.[27][28]
Trajectories of particles due to the Lorentz force
In many cases of practical interest, the motion in a magnetic field of an electrically charged particle (such as an electron or ion in a plasma) can be treated as the superposition of a relatively fast circular motion around a point called the guiding center and a relatively slow drift of this point. The drift speeds may differ for various species depending on their charge states, masses, or temperatures, possibly resulting in electric currents or chemical separation.
Significance of the Lorentz force
While the modern Maxwell's equations describe how electrically charged particles and currents or moving charged particles give rise to electric and magnetic fields, the Lorentz force law completes that picture by describing the force acting on a moving point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields.[12][29] The Lorentz force law describes the effect of E and B upon a point charge, but such electromagnetic forces are not the entire picture. Charged particles are possibly coupled to other forces, notably gravity and nuclear forces. Thus, Maxwell's equations do not stand separate from other physical laws, but are coupled to them via the charge and current densities. The response of a point charge to the Lorentz law is one aspect; the generation of E and B by currents and charges is another.
When a wire carrying an electric current is placed in a magnetic field, each of the moving charges, which comprise the current, experiences the Lorentz force, and together they can create a macroscopic force on the wire (sometimes called the Laplace force). By combining the Lorentz force law above with the definition of electric current, the following equation results, in the case of a straight stationary wire in a homogeneous field:[30]
where ℓ is a vector whose magnitude is the length of the wire, and whose direction is along the wire, aligned with the direction of the conventional currentI.
If the wire is not straight, the force on it can be computed by applying this formula to each infinitesimal segment of wire , then adding up all these forces by integration. This results in the same formal expression, but ℓ should now be understood as the vector connecting the end points of the curved wire with direction from starting to end point of conventional current. Usually, there will also be a net torque.
If, in addition, the magnetic field is inhomogeneous, the net force on a stationary rigid wire carrying a steady current I is given by integration along the wire,
One application of this is Ampère's force law, which describes how two current-carrying wires can attract or repel each other, since each experiences a Lorentz force from the other's magnetic field.
EMF
The magnetic force (qv × B) component of the Lorentz force is responsible for motionalelectromotive force (or motional EMF), the phenomenon underlying many electrical generators. When a conductor is moved through a magnetic field, the magnetic field exerts opposite forces on electrons and nuclei in the wire, and this creates the EMF. The term "motional EMF" is applied to this phenomenon, since the EMF is due to the motion of the wire.
In other electrical generators, the magnets move, while the conductors do not. In this case, the EMF is due to the electric force (qE) term in the Lorentz Force equation. The electric field in question is created by the changing magnetic field, resulting in an induced EMF, as described by the Maxwell–Faraday equation (one of the four modern Maxwell's equations).[31]
Both of these EMFs, despite their apparently distinct origins, are described by the same equation, namely, the EMF is the rate of change of magnetic flux through the wire. (This is Faraday's law of induction, see below.) Einstein's special theory of relativity was partially motivated by the desire to better understand this link between the two effects.[31] In fact, the electric and magnetic fields are different facets of the same electromagnetic field, and in moving from one inertial frame to another, the solenoidal vector field portion of the E-field can change in whole or in part to a B-field or vice versa.[32]
Given a loop of wire in a magnetic field, Faraday's law of induction states the induced electromotive force (EMF) in the wire is:
where
is the magnetic flux through the loop, B is the magnetic field, Σ(t) is a surface bounded by the closed contour ∂Σ(t), at time t, dA is an infinitesimal vector area element of Σ(t) (magnitude is the area of an infinitesimal patch of surface, direction is orthogonal to that surface patch).
The sign of the EMF is determined by Lenz's law. Note that this is valid for not only a stationary wire – but also for a moving wire.
Let Σ(t) be the moving wire, moving together without rotation and with constant velocity v and Σ(t) be the internal surface of the wire. The EMF around the closed path ∂Σ(t) is given by:[33]
where is the electric field and dℓ is an infinitesimal vector element of the contour ∂Σ(t).
NB: Both dℓ and dA have a sign ambiguity; to get the correct sign, the right-hand rule is used, as explained in the article Kelvin–Stokes theorem.
The above result can be compared with the version of Faraday's law of induction that appears in the modern Maxwell's equations, called here the Maxwell–Faraday equation:
The Maxwell–Faraday equation also can be written in an integral form using the Kelvin–Stokes theorem.[34]
So we have, the Maxwell Faraday equation:
and the Faraday Law,
The two are equivalent if the wire is not moving. Using the Leibniz integral rule and that div B = 0, results in,
and using the Maxwell Faraday equation,
since this is valid for any wire position it implies that,
Faraday's law of induction holds whether the loop of wire is rigid and stationary, or in motion or in process of deformation, and it holds whether the magnetic field is constant in time or changing. However, there are cases where Faraday's law is either inadequate or difficult to use, and application of the underlying Lorentz force law is necessary. See inapplicability of Faraday's law.
If the magnetic field is fixed in time and the conducting loop moves through the field, the magnetic flux ΦB linking the loop can change in several ways. For example, if the B-field varies with position, and the loop moves to a location with different B-field, ΦB will change. Alternatively, if the loop changes orientation with respect to the B-field, the B ⋅ dA differential element will change because of the different angle between B and dA, also changing ΦB. As a third example, if a portion of the circuit is swept through a uniform, time-independent B-field, and another portion of the circuit is held stationary, the flux linking the entire closed circuit can change due to the shift in relative position of the circuit's component parts with time (surface ∂Σ(t) time-dependent). In all three cases, Faraday's law of induction then predicts the EMF generated by the change in ΦB.
Note that the Maxwell Faraday's equation implies that the Electric Field E is non conservative when the Magnetic Field B varies in time, and is not expressible as the gradient of a scalar field, and not subject to the gradient theorem since its curl is not zero.[33][35]
(Notice that the coordinates and the velocity components should be treated as independent variables, so the del operator acts only on , not on ; thus, there is no need of using Feynman's subscript notation in the equation above). Using the chain rule, the total derivative of is:
so that the above expression becomes:
With v = ẋ, we can put the equation into the convenient Euler–Lagrange form
The Lagrangian for a charged particle of mass m and charge q in an electromagnetic field equivalently describes the dynamics of the particle in terms of its energy, rather than the force exerted on it. The classical expression is given by:[36]
where A and ϕ are the potential fields as above. The quantity can be thought as a velocity-dependent potential function.[37] Using Lagrange's equations, the equation for the Lorentz force given above can be obtained again.
Derivation of Lorentz force from classical Lagrangian (SI units)
For an A field, a particle moving with velocity v = ṙ has potential momentum, so its potential energy is . For a ϕ field, the particle's potential energy is .
Lagrange's equations are
(same for y and z). So calculating the partial derivatives:
equating and simplifying:
and similarly for the y and z directions. Hence the force equation is:
The potential energy depends on the velocity of the particle, so the force is velocity dependent, so it is not conservative.
The relativistic Lagrangian is
The action is the relativistic arclength of the path of the particle in spacetime, minus the potential energy contribution, plus an extra contribution which quantum mechanically is an extra phase a charged particle gets when it is moving along a vector potential.
Derivation of Lorentz force from relativistic Lagrangian (SI units)
The equations of motion derived by extremizing the action (see matrix calculus for the notation):
are the same as Hamilton's equations of motion:
both are equivalent to the noncanonical form:
This formula is the Lorentz force, representing the rate at which the EM field adds relativistic momentum to the particle.
The fields are transformed to a frame moving with constant relative velocity by:
where Λμα is the Lorentz transformation tensor.
Translation to vector notation
The α = 1 component (x-component) of the force is
Substituting the components of the covariant electromagnetic tensor F yields
Using the components of covariant four-velocity yields
The calculation for α = 2, 3 (force components in the y and z directions) yields similar results, so collecting the 3 equations into one:
and since differentials in coordinate time dt and proper time dτ are related by the Lorentz factor,
so we arrive at
This is precisely the Lorentz force law, however, it is important to note that p is the relativistic expression,
Lorentz force in spacetime algebra (STA)
The electric and magnetic fields are dependent on the velocity of an observer, so the relativistic form of the Lorentz force law can best be exhibited starting from a coordinate-independent expression for the electromagnetic and magnetic fields , and an arbitrary time-direction, . This can be settled through spacetime algebra (or the geometric algebra of spacetime), a type of Clifford algebra defined on a pseudo-Euclidean space,[39] as
and
is a spacetime bivector (an oriented plane segment, just like a vector is an oriented line segment), which has six degrees of freedom corresponding to boosts (rotations in spacetime planes) and rotations (rotations in space-space planes). The dot product with the vector pulls a vector (in the space algebra) from the translational part, while the wedge-product creates a trivector (in the space algebra) who is dual to a vector which is the usual magnetic field vector.
The relativistic velocity is given by the (time-like) changes in a time-position vector , where
(which shows our choice for the metric) and the velocity is
The proper (invariant is an inadequate term because no transformation has been defined) form of the Lorentz force law is simply
Note that the order is important because between a bivector and a vector the dot product is anti-symmetric. Upon a spacetime split like one can obtain the velocity, and fields as above yielding the usual expression.
Lorentz force in general relativity
In the general theory of relativity the equation of motion for a particle with mass and charge , moving in a space with metric tensor and electromagnetic field , is given as
where ( is taken along the trajectory), , and .
The equation can also be written as
where is the Christoffel symbol (of the torsion-free metric connection in general relativity), or as
where is the covariant differential in general relativity (metric, torsion-free).
Applications
The Lorentz force occurs in many devices, including:
^H is measured in amperes per metre (A/m) in SI units, and in oersteds (Oe) in cgs units. "International system of units (SI)". NIST reference on constants, units, and uncertainty. National Institute of Standards and Technology. 12 April 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
^J.A. Wheeler; C. Misner; K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. pp. 72–73. ISBN0-7167-0344-0.. These authors use the Lorentz force in tensor form as definer of the electromagnetic tensorF, in turn the fields E and B.
^I.S. Grant; W.R. Phillips; Manchester Physics (1990). Electromagnetism (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 122. ISBN978-0-471-92712-9.
^I.S. Grant; W.R. Phillips; Manchester Physics (1990). Electromagnetism (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 123. ISBN978-0-471-92712-9.
^Gauss, Carl Friedrich (1867). Carl Friedrich Gauss Werke. Fünfter Band. Königliche Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen. p. 617.
^ abSee Jackson, page 2. The book lists the four modern Maxwell's equations, and then states, "Also essential for consideration of charged particle motion is the Lorentz force equation, F = q(E + v × B), which gives the force acting on a point charge q in the presence of electromagnetic fields."
^Delon, Michel (2001). Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment. Chicago, IL: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 538. ISBN157958246X.
^Goodwin, Elliot H. (1965). The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 8: The American and French Revolutions, 1763–93. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 130. ISBN9780521045469.
^See Griffiths, page 326, which states that Maxwell's equations, "together with the [Lorentz] force law...summarize the entire theoretical content of classical electrodynamics".
The numbered references refer in part to the list immediately below.
Feynman, Richard Phillips; Leighton, Robert B.; Sands, Matthew L. (2006). The Feynman lectures on physics (3 vol.). Pearson / Addison-Wesley. ISBN0-8053-9047-2.: volume 2.
Jackson, John David (1999). Classical electrodynamics (3rd ed.). New York, [NY.]: Wiley. ISBN0-471-30932-X.
Serway, Raymond A.; Jewett, John W. Jr. (2004). Physics for scientists and engineers, with modern physics. Belmont, [CA.]: Thomson Brooks/Cole. ISBN0-534-40846-X.
إيفانز وايز معلومات شخصية الميلاد 23 نوفمبر 1973 (العمر 50 سنة)بورت أوف سبين الطول 1.85 م (6 قدم 1 بوصة) مركز اللعب وسط الجنسية ترينيداد وتوباغو مسيرة الشباب سنوات فريق St. Anthony's College Mercer County Community College [الإنجليزية] المسيرة الاحترافية1 سنوات فريق م. (هـ.) 1994 Culture United 34...
Part of a series onThomas Aquinas Thomism Scholasticism Apophatic theology Divine simplicity Quinque viae Beatific vision Actus purus Actus essendi Primum Movens Sacraments Correspondence theory Hylomorphism Substance theory (ousia) Substantial form Quiddity (essence / accident nature) Peripatetic axiom Principle of double effect Aristotelian ethics Cardinal / Theological Natural law Determinatio Just war Just price Concupiscence Analytical Thomism Works Summa Theo...
Artikel ini tidak memiliki referensi atau sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak bisa dipastikan. Tolong bantu perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan referensi yang layak. Tulisan tanpa sumber dapat dipertanyakan dan dihapus sewaktu-waktu.Cari sumber: Emil G.Hampp – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR artikel ini perlu dirapikan agar memenuhi standar Wikipedia. Tidak ada alasan yang diberikan. Silakan kembangkan artikel ini semampu Anda....
Stargirl First edition coverPengarangJerry SpinelliPenerjemahTanti LesmanaNegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaIndonesiaSeriStargirlPenerbitScholastic Inc., Gramedia Pustaka UtamaTanggal terbit8 August 2000 (Amerika), Februari 2004 (Indonesia)Jenis mediaBukuHalaman232 halamanISBNISBN 979-22-0586-1Diikuti olehLove, Stargirl Stargirl adalah yang ditulis oleh penulis Amerika Jerry Spinelli dan pertama kali dipublikasikan pada tahun 2000. Novel ini berdasarkan narasi Leo Borlock, siswa...
An Army at Dawn AuthorRick AtkinsonSeriesThe Liberation TrilogyGenreNon-fictionPublisherHenry Holt and CompanyPublication date2002Pages704ISBN978-1-4104-6321-0OCLC49383747Followed byThe Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943–1944 An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942–1943 is a Pulitzer Prize–winning book written in 2002 by long-time Washington Post correspondent Rick Atkinson. The book is a history of the North African Campaign, particularly focused on the ...
Batalha da passagem de Shanhai Casus belli Victoria decisiva de la Dinastía Qing Comandantes DorgonWu SanguiFan WenchengLaimbuAjige Li Zicheng Uma velha ilustração chinesa da batalha de Shanhai A Batalha da Passagem de Shanhai, ocorrida em 27 de maio de 1644 na passagem de Shanhai (Shanhaiguan, 山海關) no extremo oriental da Grande Muralha Chinesa, foi uma batalha decisiva que conduziu à formação da dinastía Qing na China. Ali, o príncipe-regente de Qing, Dorgon, aliou-se com o ex-...
Trung tướng, Anh hùng LLVTND, Giáo sư, Tiến sĩĐường Minh HưngChức vụPhó Chủ tịch Hội Cựu Công an nhân dân Việt NamNhiệm kỳ17 tháng 8 năm 2023 – nay107 ngàyTiền nhiệmchức vụ thành lậpKế nhiệmđương nhiệm Cục trưởng Cục An ninh kinh tế, Bộ Công an Việt NamNhiệm kỳ2018 – 1 tháng 9 năm 2019Kế nhiệmThiếu tướng Nguyễn Đình Thuận Phó Tổng cục trưởng Tổng cục A...
California electric vehicle company This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: Phoenix Motorcars – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Phoenix Cars LLCHeadquarters in Anaheim, CATrade namePhoenix Motorcars[1]TypeStartup[2]IndustryAutomotive[3]Founde...
Band discography You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (May 2023) Click [show] for important translation instructions. View a machine-translated version of the Russian article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the...
إفتحت أيضا كلية الطب والهندسة عام 2016[1][2]هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (يوليو 2015) كلية التجارة والاقتصاد معلومات التأسيس 1996-1997م النوع حكومي التوجهات الدراسية علمية - أدبية الموقع الجغرافي ا...
1983 soundtrack album by various artistsFlashdance: Original Soundtrack from the Motion PictureSoundtrack album by various artistsReleasedApril 11, 1983 [1]Recorded1981–1983GenreElectroEuro discohi-NRGsynth-poppop rockLength36:52LabelCasablancaPolygramProducerGiorgio MoroderPete BellottePhil RamoneRonald MagnessKeith OlsenMichael SembelloSingles from Flashdance: Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture Flashdance... What a FeelingReleased: March 1983 ManiacReleased: May 1...
1850 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne For the 1953 Ellery Queen novel, see The Scarlet Letters. For other uses, see Scarlet Letter (disambiguation). Scarlet Letter Title page, first edition, 1850AuthorNathaniel HawthorneCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreRomantic, HistoricalPublisherTicknor, Reed & FieldsPublication date1850Dewey Decimal813.3TextScarlet Letter at Wikisource The Scarlet Letter: A Romance is a work of historical fiction by American author Nathaniel Hawthorne, published in ...
Filipino actor and comedian For other people named José de León, see José de León (disambiguation). In this Philippine name, the middle name or maternal family name is Ramos and the surname or paternal family name is de Leon. Joey de LeonDe Leon in 2010BornJose Maria Ramos de Leon Jr. (1946-10-14) October 14, 1946 (age 77)Binondo, Manila, PhilippinesOccupationsComedianactortelevision presenterYears active1969–presentSpouse(s)Daria Ramirez (annulled) Eileen Macapagal...
Sinkhole in Puebla, Mexico 19°07′33″N 98°22′26″W / 19.125884°N 98.373820°W / 19.125884; -98.373820 The Puebla sinkhole The Puebla sinkhole is located in the town of Santa Maria Zacatepec, Juan C. Bonilla municipality, Puebla, Mexico. It is found 93.7 kilometres (58.2 mi) east of the state capital of Puebla, and 212 kilometres (132 mi) east of Mexico City, at coordinates 19.1257, -98.3738. The sinkhole first appeared on May 29, 2021, with a diamete...
هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (يناير 2022) تضم هذه القائمة أشهر الاختصارات في الفلبين.[1] يجري استخدام الاختصارات على نطاق واسع في قطاعات مختلفة من المجتمع الفلبيني. غالبا ما تستخدم الاختصارات نظر...
Medical conditionWater–electrolyte imbalanceDiagram of ion concentrations and charge across a semi-permeable cellular membrane.SpecialtyNephrology Causeshypocalcemia Electrolyte imbalance, or water-electrolyte imbalance, is an abnormality in the concentration of electrolytes in the body. Electrolytes play a vital role in maintaining homeostasis in the body. They help to regulate heart and neurological function, fluid balance, oxygen delivery, acid–base balance and much more. Electrol...
Agnes was a princess of Hesse (1527–1555) Agnes of HesseElectress consort of SaxonyDuchess consort of SaxonyBorn31 May 1527MarburgDied4 November 1555(1555-11-04) (aged 28)WeimarSpouse Maurice, Elector of Saxony (m. 1541; died 1553) John Frederick II, Duke of Saxony (m. 1555) Issue Anna, Princess of Orange Prince Albert HouseHesseFatherPhilip I, Landgrave of HesseMotherChristine of SaxonyReligionP...
العلاقات السيراليونية الصربية سيراليون صربيا سيراليون صربيا تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات السيراليونية الصربية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين سيراليون وصربيا.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتين: وجه الم...