Originally posted by zachary
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Originally posted by Saleen781
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Originally posted by Ratt
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Magnetic fields are directional. Except at the poles, the planetary magnetic field itself can't be made to work against the force due to gravity because the flux direction is generally somewhat parallel to the surface. Where it is normal to the surface, it's extremely weak relative to the weight of a vehicle.
I may be wrong, but I haven't seen a way that an external magnetic field can be amplified. Its easy to generate an extremely strong magnetic field, but the field strength falls off exponentially at distance. Maglev trains work because the field distance is so short and the flux direction is normal to the rails. The vehicle interacts with an applied external field to both counteract the force due to gravity and to move, but it doesn't create its own field as a form of propulsion.
Magnetism alone as a source of propulsion doesn't seem workable. Any magnetic field generated or manipulated in the vehicle has to interact with the environment to produce force. With the absence of magnetic material to repel, or to be attracted to - the vehicle isn't going to move.
Edit: on second thought, a flow of current at a right angle to an external magnetic field will create a force that could be opposite the force due to gravity - so it is possible to have a vehicle hover with the planetary magnetic field being parallel to the surface. It would be limited, and would need a huge current to lift a vehicle of any appreciable weight.
Edit 2: paramagnetic material would amplify a magnetic field.
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