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ENGR -2150 HOMEWORK-10 Exercise 30.5 30.5. IDENTIFY and SET UP: Apply Eq. (30.5). N 400(00320 Wb) EXECUTE: (a) M 2 B 2 196 H i1 652 A N1B1 Mi (196 H)(254 A) so B1 2 711 103 Wb i2 N1 700 EVALUATE: M relates the current in one coil to the flux through the other coil. Eq. (30.5) shows that M is the same for a pair of coils, no matter which one has the current and which one has the flux. (b) M Exercise 30.8 30.8. IDENTIFY: A changing current in an inductor induces an emf in it. (a) SET UP: The self-inductance of a toroidal solenoid is L EXECUTE: L 0 N 2 A . 2 r (4 107 T m/A)(500)2 (625 104 m2 ) 781 104 H 2 (00400 m) (b) SET UP: The magnitude of the induced emf is EXECUTE: L di . dt A (781104 H) 500 A 200 0781 V 3 300 10 s (c) The current is decreasing, so the induced emf will be in the same direction as the current, which is from a to b, making b at a higher potential than a. EVALUATE: This is a reasonable value for self-inductance, in the range of a mH. Exercise 30.13 30.13.IDENTIFY: The inductance depends only on the geometry of the object, and the resistance of the wire depends on its length. SET UP: L 0 N 2 A . 2 r EXECUTE: (a) N 2 rL (0120 m)(0100 103 H) 100 103 turns. 0 A (2 107 T m/A)(0600 104 m2 ) (b) A d 2/4 and c d , so c 4 A 4 (0600 104 m2 ) 002746 m. The total length of the wire is (1000)(002746 m) 2746 m. Therefore R (00760 /m)(2746 m) 209. EVALUATE: A resistance of 2 is large enough to be significant in a circuit. Exercise 30.19 30.19.IDENTIFY: A current-carrying inductor has a magnetic field inside of itself and hence stores magnetic energy. (a) SET UP: The magnetic field inside a solenoid is B 0nI . EXECUTE: B (4 107 T m/A)(400)(800 A) 0161 T 0250 m (b) SET UP: The energy density in a magnetic field is u EXECUTE: u B2 . 2 0 (0161T) 2 103 104 J/m3 2(4 107 T m/A) (c) SET UP: The total stored energy is U uV . EXECUTE: U uV u(lA) (103 104 J/m3 )(0250 m)(0500 104 m2 ) 0129 J (d) SET UP: The energy stored in an inductor is U 12 LI 2 . EXECUTE: Solving for L and putting in the numbers gives 2U 2(0129 J) L 2 402 105 H I (800 A)2 EVALUATE: An inductor stores its energy in the magnetic field inside of it. Exercise 30.27 Exercise 30.36 1 2 f LC SET UP: is the angular frequency in rad/s and f is the corresponding frequency in Hz. 1 1 237 103 H. EXECUTE: (a) L 2 2 2 6 2 12 4 f C 4 (16 10 Hz) (418 10 F) (b) The maximum capacitance corresponds to the minimum frequency. 1 1 Cmax 2 2 2 367 1011 F 367 pF 5 4 f min L 4 (540 10 Hz)2 (237 103 H) EVALUATE: To vary f by a factor of three (approximately the range in this problem), C must be varied by a factor of nine. 30.36.IDENTIFY: Exercise 30.40 30.40.IDENTIFY: The presence of resistance in an L-R-C circuit affects the frequency of oscillation and causes the amplitude of the oscillations to decrease over time. (a) SET UP: The frequency of damped oscillations is EXECUTE: 1 (22 103 H)(150 109 F) 1 R2 2. LC 4 L (750 )2 4(22 103 H) 2 55 104 rad/s 550 104 rad/s 876 103 Hz 876 kHz. 2 2 (b) SET UP: The amplitude decreases as A(t ) A0 e –( R/2 L)t . The frequency f is f Execute: Solving for t and putting in the numbers gives: t 2L ln( A/A0 ) 2(220 103 H)ln(0100) 135 103 s 135 ms R 750 (c) SET UP: At critical damping, R 4L/C . EXECUTE: R 4(220 103 H) 150 109 F 2420 EVALUATE: The frequency with damping is almost the same as the resonance frequency of this circuit (1/ LC ), which is plausible because the 75- resistance is considerably less than the 2420 required for critical damping. Problem 30.57 30.57.IDENTIFY and SET UP: Use UC 12 CVC2 (energy stored in a capacitor) to solve for C. Then use Eq. (30.22) and 2 f to solve for the L that gives the desired current oscillation frequency. EXECUTE: VC 120 V; UC 12 CVC2 so C 2UC /VC2 2(00160 J)/(120 V)2 222F f 1 so L 1 2 LC (2 f )2 C f 3500 Hz gives L 931H EVALUATE: f is in Hz and is in rad/s; we must be careful not to confuse the two. Problem 30.61 30.61.IDENTIFY: The current through an inductor doesn’t change abruptly. After a long time the current isn’t changing and the voltage across each inductor is zero. SET UP: First combine the inductors. EXECUTE: (a) Just after the switch is closed there is no current in the inductors. There is no current in the resistors so there is no voltage drop across either resistor. A reads zero and V reads 20.0 V. (b) After a long time the currents are no longer changing, there is no voltage across the inductors, and the inductors can be replaced by short-circuits. The circuit becomes equivalent to the circuit shown in Figure 30.61a. I (200 V)/(750 ) 0267 A. The voltage between points a and b is zero, so the voltmeter reads zero. (c) Combine the inductor network into its equivalent, as shown in Figure 30.61b. R 750 is the equivalent resistance. Eq. (30.14) says i ( /R)(1 et/ ) with L/R (108 mH)/(750 ) 0144 ms. 200 V, R 750 , t 0115 ms so i 0147A. VR iR (0147 A)(750 ) 110 V. 200 V VR VL 0 and VL 200 V VR 90 V. The ammeter reads 0.147 A and the voltmeter reads 9.0 V. EVALUATE: The current through the battery increases from zero to a final value of 0.267 A . The voltage across the inductor network drops from 20.0 V to zero. Figure 30.61 Problem 30.69 30.69.IDENTIFY: Apply the loop rule to each parallel branch. The voltage across a resistor is given by iR and the voltage across an inductor is given by L di/dt . The rate of change of current through the inductor is limited. SET UP: With S closed the circuit is sketched in Figure 30.69a. The rate of change of the current through the inductor is limited by the induced emf. Just after the switch is closed the current in the inductor has not had time to increase from zero, so i2 0. Figure 30.69a EXECUTE : (a) vab 0, so vab 600 V (b) The voltage drops across R, as we travel through the resistor in the direction of the current, so point a is at higher potential. (c) i2 0 so vR i2 R2 0 vR 2 2 vL 0 so vL 600 V (d) The voltage rises when we go from b to a through the emf, so it must drop when we go from a to b through the inductor. Point c must be at higher potential than point d. di (e) After the switch has been closed a long time, 2 0 so vL 0. Then vR2 0 and i2 R2 dt 600 V so i2 240 A. R2 250 SET UP: The rate of change of the current through the inductor is limited by the induced emf. Just after the switch is opened again the current through the inductor hasn’t had time to change and is still i2 240 A. The circuit is sketched in Figure 30.69b. EXECUTE: The current through R1 is i2 240 A in the direction b to a. Thus vab i2R1 (240 A)(400 ) vab 960 V. Figure 30.69b (f) Point where current enters resistor is at higher potential; point b is at higher potential. (g) vL vR1 vR2 0 vL vR1 vR2 vR1 vab 960 V; vR2 i2R2 (240 A)(250 ) 600 V Then vL vR1 vR2 960 V 600 V 156 V. As you travel counterclockwise around the circuit in the direction of the current, the voltage drops across each resistor, so it must rise across the inductor and point d is at higher potential than point c. The current is decreasing, so the induced emf in the inductor is directed in the direction of the current. Thus, vcd 156 V. (h) Point d is at higher potential. EVALUATE: The voltage across R1 is constant once the switch is closed. In the branch containing R2 , just after S is closed the voltage drop is all across L and after a long time it is all across R2 . Just after S is opened the same current flows in the single loop as had been flowing through the inductor and the sum of the voltage across the resistors equals the voltage across the inductor. This voltage dies away, as the energy stored in the inductor is dissipated in the resistors.