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Physics 1202: Lecture 12 Today’s Agenda • Announcements: – Lectures posted on: www.phys.uconn.edu/~rcote/ – HW assignments, solutions etc. • Homework #4: – Not this week ! (time to prepare midterm) • Midterm 1: – Friday Oct. 2 – Chaps. 15, 16 & 17. Magnetic Force on a Current or Current loop & Magnetic Dipole Moment • No net force • If plane of loop is not ^ to field, there will be a non-zero torque on the loop! q • We can define the magnetic dipole moment of a current loop as follows: magnitude: m=AI direction: right-hand rule • Torque on loop can then be rewritten as: t = A I B sinq • Note: if loop consists of N turns, m = N A I B x w F m q F . Calculation of Magnetic Field • Two ways to calculate the Magnetic Field: • Biot-Savart Law: ´ I "Brute force" • Ampere's Law "High symmetry" • These are the analogous equations for the Magnetic Field! m0= 4 X 10-7 T m /A: permeability (vacuum) Magnetic Field of Straight Wire \ Direction of B: right-hand rule Lecture 12, ACT 1 • I have two wires, labeled 1 and 2, carrying equal current, into the page. We know that wire 1 produces a magnetic field, and that wire 2 has moving charges. What is the force on wire 2 from wire 1 ? (a) Force to the right Wire 1 Wire 2 X X I (b) Force to the left (c) Force = 0 I Force between two conductors • Force on wire 2 due to B at wire 1: • Force on wire 2 due to B at wire 1: • Total force between wires 1 and 2: • Direction: attractive for I1, I2 same direction repulsive for I1, I2 opposite direction Circular Loop • Circular loop of radius R carries current i. Calculate B along the axis of the loop: I R • At the center (z=0): r z r x Bz = • Note the form the field takes for z>>R: m0 I 2R DB q z > > • Symmetry B in z-direction. • Rq Bz = DB N m0 I 2R for N coils Lecture 12, ACT 2 • Equal currents I flow in identical circular loops as shown in the diagram. The loop on the right (left) carries current in the ccw (cw) direction as seen looking along the +z direction. – What is the magnetic field Bz(A) at point A, the midpoint between the two loops? (a) Bz(A) < 0 (b) Bz(A) = 0 I o I x B A x (c) Bz(A) > 0 o z Lecture 12, ACT 2 • Equal currents I flow in identical circular loops as shown in the diagram. The loop on the right (left) carries current in the ccw (cw) direction as seen looking along the +z direction. I o I x B A x o – What is the magnetic field Bz(B) at point B, just to the right of the right loop? (a) Bz(B) < 0 (b) Bz(B) = 0 (c) Bz(B) > 0 z B Field of a Solenoid • A constant magnetic field can (in principle) be produced by an sheet of current. In practice, however, a constant magnetic field is often produced by a solenoid. L • A solenoid is defined by a current I flowing through a wire which is wrapped n turns per unit length on a cylinder of radius a and length L. • If a << L, the B field is to first order contained within the solenoid, in the axial direction, and of constant magnitude. In this limit, we can calculate the field using Ampere's Law. a B Field of a Solenoid • To calculate the B field of the solenoid using Ampere's Law, we need to justify the claim that the B field is 0 outside the solenoid. • To do this, view the solenoid from the side as 2 current sheets. • The fields are in the same direction in the region between the sheets (inside the solenoid) and cancel outside the sheets (outside the solenoid). xxxxx • •• • • (n: number of turns per unit length) Toroid • • Toroid defined by N total turns with current i. • • B=0 outside toroid! • • • xx x x x x x xx • • B inside the toroid. • • • • x • x x r xx xx • B• • • • Magnetism in Matter • When a substance is placed in an external magnetic field Bo, the total magnetic field B is a combination of Bo and field due to magnetic moments (Magnetization; M): – B = Bo + moM = mo (H +M) = mo (H + c H) = mo (1+c) H » where H is magnetic field strength c is magnetic susceptibility • Alternatively, total magnetic field B can be expressed as: – B = mm H » where mm is magnetic permeability » mm = mo (1 + c ) • All the matter can be classified in terms of their response to applied magnetic field: – Paramagnets – Diamagnets – Ferromagnets mm > mo mm < mo mm >>> mo Faraday's Law n B B N q S v S B N v FB = B· A = BAcosq DF B e =Dt B Induction Effects • Bar magnet moves through coil S N N S N S Current induced in coil • Change pole that enters Induced current changes sign • Bar magnet stationary inside coil No current induced in coil • Coil moves past fixed bar magnet Current induced in coil v S N v v Faraday's Law • Define the flux of the magnetic field B through a surface A=An from: n FB = B· A = BAcosq B q B • Faraday's Law: The emf induced around a closed circuit is determined by the time rate of change of the magnetic flux through that circuit. DF B e =Dt The minus sign indicates direction of induced current (given by Lenz's Law). Faraday’’s law for many loops • Circuit consists of N loops: all same area FB magn. flux through one loop loops in “series” emfs add! DF B e = -N Dt • Lenz's Law: Lenz's Law The induced current will appear in such a direction that it opposes the change in flux that produced it. B B S N v N S v • Conservation of energy considerations: Claim: Direction of induced current must be so as to oppose the change; otherwise conservation of energy would be violated. » Why??? • If current reinforced the change, then the change would get bigger and that would in turn induce a larger current which would increase the change, etc.. Lecture 12, ACT 3 y • A conducting rectangular loop moves with constant velocity v in the +x direction through a region of constant magnetic field B in the -z direction as shown. – What is the direction of the induced current in the loop? (a) ccw (b) cw XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX X X X X X X X vX X X X X XXXXXXXXXXXX x (c) no induced current Lecture 12, ACT 4 y •A conducting rectangular loop moves with constant velocity v in the -y direction away from a wire with a constant current I as shown. • What is the direction of the induced current in the loop? (a) ccw (b) cw I v (c) no induced current x