* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Part I
Electrical resistance and conductance wikipedia , lookup
Maxwell's equations wikipedia , lookup
History of electromagnetic theory wikipedia , lookup
Field (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Neutron magnetic moment wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic monopole wikipedia , lookup
Magnetic field wikipedia , lookup
Aharonov–Bohm effect wikipedia , lookup
Electromagnetism wikipedia , lookup
Superconductivity wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 30: Sources of the Magnetic Field Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter Outline • Magnetic Field Due to a Straight Wire • Force between Two Parallel Wires • Definitions of the Ampere & the Coulomb • Ampère’s Law • Magnetic Field of a Solenoid and a Toroid • Biot-Savart Law • Magnetic Materials – Ferromagnetism • Electromagnets and Solenoids – Applications • Magnetic Fields in Magnetic Materials; Hysteresis • Paramagnetism and Diamagnetism Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Magnetic Field Due to a Long, Straight Current Carrying Wire: Direction • Ch. 29: The magnetic field lines for a long, straight, current carrying wire are circles concentric with the wire. • The field lines are in planes perpendicular to the wire. • The magnitude of the field is constant on a circle of radius a. • Use the right-hand rule to determine the direction of the field, as shown. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Magnetic Field Due to a Current Carrying Wire • A compass can be used to detect the magnetic field. • When there is no current in the wire, there is no field due to the current. • In this case, the compass needles all point toward the Earth’s north pole. • Due to the Earth’s magnetic field Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Magnetic Field Due to a Current Carrying Wire • When the wire carries a current, the compass needles deflect in a direction tangent to the circle. • This shows the direction of the magnetic field produced by the wire. • If the current is reversed, the direction of the needles also reverses. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. The circular magnetic field around the wire is shown by the iron filings. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Magnetic Field Due to a Straight Wire Experimental Results show that the Magnetic field B due to a straight, current carying wire is proportional to the Current I & inversely proportional to the distance r from the wire: μ0 is a constant, called the permeability of free space. It’s value is μ0 = 4π 10-7 T·m/A. It plays a similar role for magnetic fields that ε0 plays for electric fields! Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Calculation of B Near a Wire An electric wire in the wall of a building carries a dc current I = 25 A vertically upward. Calculate the magnetic field B due to this current at a point P = 10 cm in the radial direction from the wire. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Calculation of B Near a Wire An electric wire in the wall of a building carries a dc current I = 25 A vertically upward. Calculate the magnetic field B due to this current at a point P = 10 cm in the radial direction from the wire. Solution Use This gives B = 5.0 10-5 T Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Example Magnetic field midway between two currents. Two parallel straight wires a distance 10.0 cm apart carry currents in opposite directions. Current I1 = 5.0 A is out of the page, and I2 = 7.0 A is into the page. Calculate the magnitude & direction of the magnetic field halfway between the 2 wires. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Example Magnetic field midway between two currents. Two parallel straight wires a distance 10.0 cm apart carry currents in opposite directions. Current I1 = 5.0 A is out of the page, and I2 = 7.0 A is into the page. Calculate the magnitude & direction of the magnetic field halfway between the 2 wires. Solution: Use for each wire. Then add them as vectors B = B1 + B2 B = 4.8 10-5 T Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Conceptual Example Magnetic Field Due to 4 Wires The figure shows 4 long parallel wires which carry equal currents into or out of the page. In which configuration, (a) or (b), is the magnetic field greater at the center of the square? a Solution: S: S: Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. b Solution: Conceptual Example Magnetic Field Due to 4 Wires The figure shows 4 long parallel wires which carry equal currents into or out of the page. In which configuration, (a) or (b), is the magnetic field greater at the center of the square? a Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. b Magnetic Force Between Two Parallel Wires • Recall from Ch. 29 that the force F on a wire carrying current I in a magnetic field B is: • We’ve just seen that the magnetic field B produced at the position of wire 2 due to the current in wire 1 is: • The force F this field exerts The magnetic force between on a length ℓ2 of wire 2 is 2 currents is analogous to the Coulomb electric force between 2 charges!! Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Using the cross product form of the force: & applying the right hand rule shows that Parallel Currents ATTRACT and Anti-Parallel Currents REPEL. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Example Force Between Two Current-carrying Wires. The two wires of a 2.0-m long appliance cord are d = 3.0 mm apart & carry a current I = 8.0 A dc. Calculate the force one wire exerts on the other. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Example Force Between Two Current-carrying Wires. The two wires of a 2.0-m long appliance cord are d = 3.0 mm apart & carry a current I = 8.0 A dc. Calculate the force one wire exerts on the other. Use: Resulting in F = 8.5 10-3 N Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Example Suspending a wire with a current. A horizontal wire carries a current I1 = 80 A dc. Calculate the current I2 that a second parallel wire d = 20 cm below it must carry so that it doesn’t fall due to gravity. The lower wire has a mass per meter of (m/ℓ) = 0.12 g/m. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Definitions of the Ampere & the Coulomb The SI unit of current, the Ampere is officially defined in terms of the force between two current-carrying wires: One Ampere IS DEFINED as that current flowing in each of two long parallel wires 1 m apart, which results in a force of exactly F =2 10-7 N per meter of length of each wire. One Coulomb is IS DEFINED as exactly 1 ampere-second. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.