What is magnetism in the electromagnetic force?

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I’ve searched the topic through multiple pop science sources, but I still cannot see to grasp what magnetism actually is, and what it does.

Some basic answers talk about magnetism being the stuff that makes magnet works, that moving charges cause it, and that in reality it’s just special relativity making electricity act like what we call magnetism. They all use the same old example of a wire with moving charges in front of one with static charges, and imply that magnetism is just a fictitious force, that charge is the real stuff, that magnets are when electrons move inside atoms. All of it sounds nice and simple, except for this little thing called spin that gets throw aside as a minor detail…

Then there is the other main explanation, the one that talk about magnetism as having to do with spin, but never explain what exactly it does different from regular electric charge, or why electric charges in movement cause it, it just does. This explanation tells how it is a field, how it is interconnected with the electric field and changes in one make changes in other, and how light is a wave in both. Magnetism just is, it’s just present and all electrons are magnets but that explain little about what it does, how it is different from charge. Does it not attract and repel?

So TL:DR, what is magnetism anyways, what does it do to electrons and other particles? Does it pushes and pulls, or does it do something else?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

[This video](https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=XoVW7CRR5JY) is what made magnetism finally make sense to me. Interestingly enough, it involves being a consequence of special relativity

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