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Monday, 25 July 2016 The outline Today: • Sources of magnetic fields • Capacitor review • Charging Capacitor • Discharging Capacitor • Tomorrow: Midterm Review Magnetism and magnetic fields • Lab this week! • Today: some magnetic facts… • Source of magnetic field: moving charges Magnetic field (B) Magnetic Force on a Compass The figure shows a compass needle in a magnetic field. A magnetic force is exerted on each of the two poles of the compass, parallel to for the north pole and opposite for the south pole. This pair of opposite forces exerts a torque on the needle, rotating the needle until it is parallel to the magnetic field at that point. How did we know if there is a field? – be careful that there are no other fields present • • Electric field? • Put a positive point charge into the region. • No gravity! Magnetic field? • Place a magnetic dipole into the region. • Earth’s magnetic field! Magnetic Fields Around Us Slide 24-21 Earth’s North pole is a magnetic south pole Earth’s North pole is a magnetic south pole Magnetic Fields from More Than One Source The total magnetic field at any point is the vector sum of the individual fields at that point. This is the principle of superposition. © 2015 Pearson Electric Current Causes a Magnetic Field Sources of magnetic field: current (moving charge) The magnetic field is revealed by the pattern of iron filings around a current-carrying wire. Slide 32-35 Electric Current Causes a Magnetic Field Sources of magnetic field: current (moving charge) The right-hand rule determines the orientation of the compass needles to the direction of the current. Slide 32-37 Slide 24-24 Drawing Field Vectors and Field Lines of a Current-Carrying Wire Slide 24-28 QuickCheck 32.4 A long, straight wire extends into and out of the screen. The current in the wire is A. Into the screen. B. Out of the screen. C. There is no current in the wire. D. Not enough info to tell the direction. Slide 32-38 QuickCheck 32.4 A long, straight wire extends into and out of the screen. The current in the wire is A. Into the screen. B. Out of the screen. C. There is no current in the wire. D. Not enough info to tell the direction. Right-hand rule Slide 32-39 QuickCheck 24.10 The following diagram shows a current loop perpendicular to the page; the view is a “slice” through the loop. The direction of the current in the wire at the top and at the bottom is shown. What is the direction of the magnetic field at a point in the center of the loop? 1. To the left 2. Up 3. To the right 4. Down © 2015 Pearson QuickCheck 24.10 The following diagram shows a current loop perpendicular to the page; the view is a “slice” through the loop. The direction of the current in the wire at the top and at the bottom is shown. What is the direction of the magnetic field at a point in the center of the loop? 1. To the left 2. Up 3. To the right 4. Down © 2015 Pearson On to circuits... A circuit Rank the brightness of each resistor assuming each resistor represents a light bulb. Pick your own labeling system Find the current through each resistor and the voltage drop across the resistor using Kirchoff's Rules and Ohm's Law A circuit Rank the brightness of each resistor assuming each resistor represents a light bulb. Pick your own labeling system B12Ω>B3Ω>B4Ω Find the current through each resistor and the voltage drop across the resistor using Kirchoff's Rules and Ohm's Law I12Ω=0.22A, I3Ω=0.12A, I4Ω=0.10A V12Ω=2.6V, V3Ω=V4Ω=0.4V A circuit What is the potential difference between point B and C? What is the potential at A, B and C? B C A A circuit What is the potential difference between point B and C? 0.4V What is the potential at A, B and C? (0V, -0.4V, 2.6V) B C A A circuit – Can you do this one? What if the 4Ω resistor is replaced with a capacitor (the capacitor is initially uncharged? Draw the voltage with respect to time across the capacitor and each resistor. To be done on Tuesday! C Capacitor Review • The charge on the capacitor plates is directly proportional to the potential difference between the plates. C=capacitance The SI unit of capacitance is the farad: • Energy stored in a capacitor: • Dielectric in a capacitor: Q q W dq C 0 RC circuits: Discharging • See book page 909-911 (by integration) where Q0 is the charge at t = 0, and = RC is the time constant. The capacitor voltage is directly proportional to the charge, so: RC Circuits The current and the capacitor voltage decay to zero after the switch closes, but not linearly. © 2015 Pearson Which capacitor discharges more quickly after the switch is closed? A. Capacitor A. B. Capacitor B. C. They discharge at the same rate. D. Can’t say without knowing the initial amount of charge. QuickCheck 31.18 Which capacitor discharges more quickly after the switch is closed? Smaller time constant= RC A. Capacitor A. B. Capacitor B. C. They discharge at the same rate. D. Can’t say without knowing the initial amount of charge. Slide 31-109