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Magnets by Charity I. Mulig Uses • • • • • • • Electric motors Electric generators CRTs Microwave ovens Loudspeakers Printers Disk drives Nature of Magnetism • The first evidence of the relationship between electricity and magnetism was discovered in England by Hans Christian Oersted in 1820. He found out that a current-carrying wire deflects a compass needle. Similar experiments were done in France by Andre Ampere. • Michael Faraday (England) and Joseph Henry (US) discovered that moving a magnet near a conducting loop causes a current in the loop. Faraday’s Law Any change in the magnetic environment of a coil of wire will cause a voltage (emf) to be induced in the coil. Vinduced N NBA t t Pp Ps I pV p I sVs Np Vp Is N s Vs I p Magnetic Field The magnetic field is due to the “distortions” in the electric field caused by motion. Magnetic field is the relativistic by-product of the electric field. General Information • Produced by moving charges. • Perpendicular to direction of the charge’s velocity. • The magnetic field direction is tangent to the magnetic field line. • The magnetic field decreases with increasing distance from the charge which produces it. • The unit for magnetic field is Tesla (1 T = 1N/Am) or gauss (1 T = 104 gauss) • The general form is F B qv sin Magnetic Field of a Moving Charge Where: • μ0 is the permeability of free space which is equal to 4π x 10-7 Wb/A-m • q is the electric charge • v is the speed of the charge • r is the perpendicular distance of the point where the magnetic field is being determined and the path of the moving charge o qv B 2 4r Note: (For positive charges only) 1. Use your right hand. 2. Point your thumb to the direction of the velocity. 3. Curl your fingers around the path traversed by the charge. This is the direction of the magnetic field. Magnetic Field of a Straight CurrentCarrying Wire o I B 2s Where: • I is the current • s is the perpendicular distance of the point and the wire Magnetic Field of a Current-Carrying Loop B o NI 2r Where: • N is the number of loops • r is the radius of the loop Magnetic Field inside a Solenoid B o NI l Where l is the length of the solenoid. Sample Problem 1 Q: Find the magnetic field in air 10mm from a wire that carries a current of 1A. Answer: 2 x 10-5 T Sample Problem 2 Question: A solenoid 20 cm long and 40mm in diameter with an air core is wound with a total of 200 turns of wire. The solenoid’s axis is parallel to the earth’s magnetic field at a place where the latter is 3 x 10-5 T in magnitude. What should the current in the solenoid be for its field to exactly cancel the earth’s field inside the solenoid. Note: μo = 4π x 10-7 T-m/A Answer: 24 mA Magnetic Force • The magnetic force between two magnets is given by p1 p 2 F d2 Where p1 and p2 are the magnetic pole strength and d is the separation distance of the two magnetic poles. The Right Hand Rule Magnetic Force On a Moving Charge FB qv xB FB qvB sin Magnetic Force On a Moving Charge Magnetic Force On a Moving Charge A magnetic bottle. Particles near either end of the region experience a magnetic force toward the center of the region. This is one way of containing an ionized gas that has a temperature of the order of 106 K which could vaporize any material container. Magnetic Force On a Moving Charge The Van Allen radiation belts around the earth. Near the poles, charged particles from these belts can enter the atmosphere, producing the aurora borealis (“northern lights”) and aurora australis (“southern lights”). Magnetic Force On a Moving Charge This bubble chamber image shows the result of a highenergy gamma ray (which does not leave a track) that collides with an electron in a hydrogen atom. This electron flies off to the right at high speed. Some of the energy in the collision is transformed into a second electron and a positron (a positively charged electron). A magnetic field is directed into the plane of the image, which makes the positive and negative particles curve off in different directions. Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Element FB ILB sin Magnetic Force on Parallel Current-Carrying Wires Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Loop Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Loop Magnetic Force on a Current-Carrying Loop The net force on a current loop in a uniform magnetic field is zero. However, the net torque is not in general equal to zero. Magnitude of Torque on a Current-Carrying Loop 2 F b 2 sin IBa b sin IBA sin NIAB sin Sample Problem Question: A particle with mass 35g and charge 50 μC is moving to the right with velocity 50 m/s in a strong magnetic field of 2.2T pointing into the board. Calculate the instantaneous acceleration that it will experience. Answer: 0.16 m/s2 Sample Problem Test your understanding. The figure at right shows a uniform magnetic field B directed into the plane of the paper (shown by the blue X’s). A particle with a negative charge moves in the plane. Which of the three paths 1, 2 or 3 – does the particle follow? Sample Problem Sample Problem Sample Problem Sample Problem Question: A long straight wire carries a current of 100A. (a) What is the force on an electron moving parallel to the wire, in the opposite direction to the current, at a speed of 1 x 107 m/s when it is 10 cm from the wire. (b) What is the force on the electron under the same circumstances when it is moving perpendicularly toward the wire? Answer: 2.0 x 10-4 T 3.2 x 10-16 N Test your understanding. The figure at right shows a top view of two conducting rails on which a conducting bar can slide. A uniform magnetic field is directed perpendicular to the plane of the figure as shown. A battery is to be connected to the two rails so that when the switch is closed, current will flow through the bar and cause a magnetic force to push the bar to the right. In which orientation, A or B, should the battery be placed in the circuit? Applications Velocity Selector Cathode Ray Tube Mass Spectrometer Loud Speaker (a) Components of a loudspeaker. (b) The permanent magnet creates a magnetic field that exerts forces on the current in the voice coil; for current I in the direction shown, the force is to the right. If the electric current in the voice coil oscillates, the speaker cone attached to the voice coil oscillates at the same frequency. Direct Current Motor Direct Current Motor