magnetic force acting on a current-carrying conductor

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Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

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Page 1: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Page 2: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• (a) Magnetic field lines coming out of the paper are indicated by dots, representing the tips of arrows coming outward.

• (b) Magnetic field lines going into the paper are indicated by crosses, representing the feathers of arrows going inward.

Page 3: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• A segment of a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field B. The magnetic force exerted on each charge making up the current is q vd x B and the net force on the segment of length L is I L x B.

Page 4: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• (a) A wire suspended vertically between the poles of a magnet. (b) The setup shown in part (a) as seen looking at the south pole of the magnet, so that the magnetic field (blue crosses) is directed into the page. When there is no current in the wire, it remains vertical. (c) When the current is upward, the wire deflects to the left. (d) When the current is downward, the wire deflects to the right

Page 5: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• The magnetic force exerted on a small segment of vector length ds in the presence of a field B is

A wire segment ofarbitrary shape carrying a current Iin a magnetic field B experiences amagnetic force. The magneticforce on any segment ds is I ds x Band is directed out of the page. Youshould use the right-hand rule toconfirm this force direction.

Page 6: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• (a) A curved wire carrying a current I in a uniform magnetic field. The total magnetic force acting on the wire is equivalent to the force on a straight wire of length L( running between the ends of the curved wire. (b) A current-carrying loop of arbitrary shape in a uniform magnetic field. The net magnetic force on the loop is zero.

Page 7: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Conclusion

• the magnetic force on a curved current-carrying wire in a uniform magnetic field is equal to that on a straight wire connecting the end points and carrying the same current

• the net magnetic force acting on any closed current loop in a uniform magnetic field is zero

Page 8: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Quick Quiz • The four wires shown in

Figure, all carry the same current from point A to point B through the same magnetic field. In all four parts of the figure, the points A and B are 10 cm apart. Rank the wires according to the magnitude of the magnetic force exerted on them, from greatest to least.

Page 9: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Motion of a Charged Particle in a Uniform Magnetic Field

• When the velocity of a charged particle is perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field, the particle moves in a circular path in a plane perpendicular to B. The magnetic force FB acting on the charge is always directed toward the center of the circle.

Page 10: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• These results show that the angular speed of the particle and the period of the circular motion do not depend on the linear speed of the particle or on the radius of the orbit.

• The angular speed ω is often referred to as the cyclotron frequency because charged particles circulate at this angular frequency in the type of accelerator called a cyclotron.

Page 11: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• If a charged particle moves in a uniform magnetic field with its velocity at some arbitrary angle with respect to B, its path is a helix

• if the field is directed in the x direction, as shown in Figure, there is no component of force in the x direction. As a result, ax =0, and the x component of velocity remains constant.

• However, the magnetic force q v x B causes the components vy and vz to change in time, and the resulting motion is a helix whose axis is parallel to the magnetic field.

• The projection of the path onto the yz plane (viewed along the x axis) is a circle

Page 12: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Example

• A proton is moving in a circular orbit of radius 14 cm in a uniform 0.35-T magnetic field perpendicular to the velocity of the proton. Find the linear speed of the proton

• Solution

Page 13: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

The Biot–Savart Law

The magnetic fielddB at a point due to the current Ithrough a length element ds isgiven by the Biot–Savart law. Thedirection of the field is out of thepage at P and into the page at P%

Page 14: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor
Page 15: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor
Page 16: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

The Magnetic Force BetweenTwo Parallel Conductors

Page 17: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

parallel conductors carrying currents in the same directionattract each other, and parallel conductors carrying currents in opposite directionsrepel each other.

Page 18: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• magnitude in terms of the force per unit length

Page 19: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Ampère’s Law• (a) When no current is present in

the wire, all compass needles point in the same direction (toward the Earth’s north pole).

• (b) When the wire carries a strong current, the compass needles deflect in a direction tangent to the circle, which is the direction of the magnetic field created by the current

Page 20: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• Ampère’s law describes the creation of magnetic fields by all continuous current configurations

Page 21: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor
Page 22: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Example

Page 23: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor
Page 24: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

The Magnetic Field of a Solenoid

Page 25: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• (a) Magnetic field lines for a tightly wound solenoid of finite length, carrying a steady current. The field in the interior space is strong and nearly uniform. Note that the field lines resemble those of a bar magnet, meaning that the solenoid effectively has north and south poles.

• (b) The magnetic field pattern of a bar magnet, displayed with small iron filings on a sheet of paper

Page 26: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor
Page 27: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Magnetic Flux

Page 28: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

• Magnetic flux through a plane lying in a magnetic field. (a) The flux through the plane is zero when the magnetic field is parallel to the plane surface. (b) The flux through the plane is a maximum when the magnetic field is perpendicular to the plane.

Page 29: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

Example

Page 30: Magnetic Force Acting on a Current-Carrying Conductor

The Magnetic Field of the Earth• the Earth’s south magnetic pole is

located near the north geographic pole, and the Earth’s north magnetic pole is located near the south geographic pole

• south magnetic pole is near the north geographic pole, and a north magnetic pole is near the south geographic pole.