The energy stored in a magnetic field is
with magnetic energy density
Like Electrostatic energy, this energy isn’t localized on currents or magnets — it’s stored in the field that fills space.
Derivation via inductor
Build up the current through an inductor of inductance from to in time . The voltage required is , instantaneous power . Total energy:
The factor catches everyone — same origin as in : the field builds gradually, so the average during charging is .
Generalization
Specialize to a solenoid of length , turns, cross-section , current . Field inside: , so . Inductance . Stored energy:
Rewrite using and volume :
So inside the solenoid, the energy density is — uniform across the solenoid interior.
This expression turns out to be universally valid, not just for solenoids: at every point in space with a magnetic field, the local energy density is . Integrating over all space recovers the total.
Worked example: coaxial cable
Inner radius , outer , length , current , permeability between conductors. The field is for , zero elsewhere (approximately).
Cross-check with and : yes, . Match.
Duality with electric
Electrostatic and magnetic energy densities are dual:
| Electric | Magnetic | |
|---|---|---|
| Density | ||
| Circuit form | ||
| Material constant |
In an electromagnetic wave both densities coexist, with average values equal — half the wave’s energy is “electric,” half is “magnetic.” The propagating energy flux is the Poynting vector .
Why factor 1/2
Same explanation as for electrostatic energy: bring up the current (or charge) gradually. Early bits of current don’t see the full final field — they see whatever field has been built so far, which is proportional to the current. So work done on each is , integrated to . The half is built into the integral, not added by hand.