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Lab 6 Magnetic Fields Introduction We will examine and compare the magnetic fields produced by a bar magnet (permanent magnet) and a solenoid (electromagnet). Equipment Power supply, DMM, rheostat, solenoid, magnetic field sensor, bar magnet, ruler and meter stick. Background All magnets, whether permanent or electromagnetic, have two poles. Magnetic fields radiate from one pole then bends around to the other. The magnitude of the magnetic field decreases as the distance from the magnet increases. For the bar magnet, we can measure only the magnetic field outside it, for a solenoid, we can actually measure the magnetic field inside it. We will observer the magnetic field behavior of both along the axis of the magnets. The magnetic field along the axis of the permanent magnet points along the axis and is inversely proportional to the distance from the magnet cubed at locations “far” from the magnet. permanent magnet S N ∝ B(r) 1/r3 solenoid currents The strength of the magnet that produces a magnetic field is characterized by the magnetic moment of the magnet, M. B(r)permanent magnet = µoM 1 2π r 3 The same generalization holds true for the solenoid but the strength is characterized by the current, I, and the number of windings per unit length, n. B(r)outside solenoid = µonI 1 2 r3 Moreover, the magnetic field inside the solenoid is constant. Binside solenoid = µonI The permeability of free space, µo, is 4π x 10-7 T•m/A. Experiment: Set Up Set the magnetic field sensor to the “axial” setting. This tells the magnetic field sensor to measure only the component of the magnetic field along the length of the sensor. Connect the magnetic field sensor to channel A of the interface box. Display a readout of magnetic field. Under the “setup” tab, set the multiplier to “1x” and unit to “gauss” (10-4 T), and set the sample rate to 1 Hz. page 1 Be sure to click on the “tare” button on the sensor before every set of measurement while the sensor is away from any magnetic field source and shielded. This is to tell the sensor to ignore the magnetic field due to ambient sources such as the Earth and nearby furniture. Experiment: Bar Magnetic Field Place the edge of the magnetic field sensor 4 cm from either end of the bar magnet. If possible, use two bar magnets stacked together with the same poles at the same end. 4 cm S magnetic field sensor x N Measure the magnetic field strength as a function of the distance from the edge of the magnet 1 cm at a time until the magnetic field reading dips below 1x10-5 T. Plot the ln(B) on the y axis and ln(r) on the x axis. Find the slope of this line. Compare it to the slope that it is supposed to be, – 3. ⎛µ ⎞1 B = ⎜⎜ o M ⎟⎟⎟ 3 ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ r ⇒ ⎛µ ⎞ ln B = ln ⎜⎜ o M ⎟⎟⎟ − 3 ln r ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ ⎛µ ⎞ ⇒ Y = ln ⎜⎜ o M ⎟⎟⎟ − 3X ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ a. What is the percent difference between the measured value and the expected value of –3? b. Use the y-intercept to find the magnetic moment of the magnet, M. The unit of the magnetic moment is A•m2. Experiment: Solenoid Build the following circuit. Connect the solenoid to the rheostat (a high-current, variable resistor), the power supply, and the DMM (connected and set to measure current to the “A” range) in series. power supply – + slider solenoid rheostat/resistor DMM (set to A) Before turning on the power supply, shield and tare the magnetic field sensor. Turn on the power supply and set it to about 20 V. Adjust the rheostat until the current reads about 1 A. Monitor the rheostat temperature to make sure it doesn't get too hot. First, measure the magnetic field sensor inside the solenoid. solenoid magnetic field sensor a. What is the percent difference between the measured value and the expected value found from the following equation? B = µonI page 2 Second, measure the magnetic field strength as a function of the distance from the edge of the solenoid 1 cm at a time until the magnetic field reading dips below 1x10-5 T. Start the data collection and move the magnetic field sensor 1 cm at a time until the magnetic field reading dips below 1x10-5 T. 4 cm magnetic field sensor solenoid x Plot the ln(B) on the y axis and ln(r) on the x axis. Find the slope of this line. Compare it to the slope that it is supposed to be, –3. ⎛µ ⎞1 B = ⎜⎜ o πnI ⎟⎟⎟ 3 ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ r ⇒ ⎛µ ⎞ ln B = ln ⎜⎜ o πnI ⎟⎟⎟ − 3 ln r ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ ⎛µ ⎞ ⇒ Y = ⎜⎜ o πnI ⎟⎟⎟ − 3X ⎜⎝ 2π ⎟⎠ a. What is the percent difference between the measured value and the expected value of –3? b. Use the y-intercept to find the equivalent magnetic moment of the magnet. It is this. M = πnI c. Which object has a larger magnetic moment, the bar magnet or the solenoid? page 3