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Announcements WebAssign HW Set 5 due October 10 Problems cover material from Chapters 18

Announcements WebAssign HW Set 5 due October 10 Problems cover material from Chapters 18 HW set 6 due on October 17 (Chapter 19) Prof . Kumar tea and cookies Tuesdays from 5 – 6… pm in room 2165 Exam 1 statistics average 12.78 stand. dev. 3.51 QUESTIONS? PLEASE ASK!.

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Announcements WebAssign HW Set 5 due October 10 Problems cover material from Chapters 18

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  1. Announcements • WebAssign HW Set 5 due October 10 • Problems cover material from Chapters 18 • HW set 6 due on October 17 (Chapter 19) • Prof. Kumar tea and cookies Tuesdays from 5 – 6… pm in room 2165 • Exam 1 statistics • average 12.78 • stand. dev. 3.51 • QUESTIONS? PLEASE ASK!

  2. From last time… • Torque on a current loop: t= B I A N sin q • Magnetic Moment: m = IAN • Electric Motors • Force on a moving charged particle in a magnetic field • Equate centripetal and magnetic forces: • Radius of orbit:

  3. Example Problem 19.42 • A cosmic ray proton in interstellar space has an energy of 10 MeV and executes a circular orbit having a radius equal to that of Mercury’s orbit around the Sun (5.8 x 1010 m). What is the magnetic field in that region of space?

  4. Magnetic Fields – Long Straight Wire • A current-carrying wire produces a magnetic field B • Right hand rule # 2 to determine direction of B • Magnitude of B at a distance r from a wire carrying current of I is: • µo = 4  x 10-7 T.m / A • µois called the permeability of free space

  5. Ampère’s Law: General • relationship between I in an arbitrarily shaped wire and B produced by the wire: B|| Δℓ = µo I • Choose an arbitrary closed path around the current • Sum all the products of B|| Δℓ around the closed path

  6. Ampère’s Law Applied to a Long Straight Wire • Use a closed circular path • The circumference of the circle is 2  r • This is identical to the result previously shown

  7. Example Problem 19.54 • Two long parallel wires separated by a distance 2d carry equal currents in the same direction. The currents are out of the page in the figure. (a) What is the direction of the magnetic field at P on the x-axis set up by the two wires? (b) Find an expression for the magnitude of the field at P. (c) From (b), determine the field midway between the two wires.

  8. Magnetic Force Between Two Parallel Conductors • The force on wire 1 is due to the current in wire 1 and the magnetic field produced by wire 2 • The force per unit length is: • Parallel conductors carrying currents in the same direction attract each other • Parallel conductors carrying currents in the opposite directions repel each other

  9. Magnetic Field of a Current Loop • The magnitude of the magnetic field at the center of a circular loop with a radius R and carrying current I is • With N loops in the coil, this becomes:

  10. Magnetic Field of a Solenoid • Solenoid – long straight wire is bent into a coil of several closely spaced loops • Electromagnet - acts like a magnet only when it carries a current • B field lines inside the solenoid are nearly parallel, uniformly spaced, and close together • B is nearly uniform and strong • The exterior field is nonuniform, much weaker, and in the opposite direction to the field inside the solenoid

  11. Magnetic Field in a Solenoid, Magnitude • The magnitude of the field inside a solenoid is constant at all points far from its ends • B = µo n I • n is the number of turns per unit length • n = N / ℓ • The same result can be obtained by applying Ampère’s Law to the solenoid

  12. Example Problem 19.60 • A certain superconducting magnet in the form of a solenoid of length 0.5 m can generate a magnetic field of 9.0T in its core when the coils carry a current of 75 A. The windings, made of a niobium-titanium alloy, must be cooled to 4.2K. Find the number of turns in the solenoid.

  13. Solution to 19.42

  14. Solution to 19.54

  15. Solution to 19.60

  16. NUMBER SCORE . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 . 0 0 : : 0 1 : : 0 2 : : 0 3 : : 4 4 :******** :******** 2 5 :**** :**** 11 6 :********************** :********************** 17 7 :********************************** :********************************** 21 8 :****************************************** :****************************************** 21 9 :****************************************** :****************************************** 40 10 :******************************************************************************** :******************************************************************************** 45 11 :****************************************************************************************** :****************************************************************************************** 36 12 :************************************************************************ :************************************************************************ 40 13 :******************************************************************************** :******************************************************************************** 40 14 :******************************************************************************** :******************************************************************************** 47 15 :********************************************************************************************** :********************************************************************************************** 35 16 :********************************************************************** :********************************************************************** 33 17 :****************************************************************** :****************************************************************** 20 18 :**************************************** :**************************************** 12 19 :************************ :************************ 5 20 :********** :**********

  17. From last time • Magnets and earth’s magnetic field • Magnetic Fields: • Units are T = N/A.m • Use right hand rule to determine direction of force • Force on a wire: F = B I L sin θ

  18. Torque on a Current Loop • Torque t = B I A N sin q • Applies to any shape loop • N is the number of turns in the coil • Torque has a maximum value of NBIA (when q = 90°) • Torque is zero when the field is parallel to the plane of the loop • Magnetic Moment m = IAN • mis a vector • Torque can be written as t = mB sinq m

  19. Example Problem 19.31 • A long piece of wire with a mass of 0.100 kg and a length of 4.00 m is used to make a square coil with a side of 0.100 m. The coil is hinged along a horizontal side, carrying a 3.40 A current, and is placed in a vertical magnetic field of 0.010 T. (a) Determine the angle that plane of the coil makes with the vertical when the coil is in equilibrium. (b) Find the torque acting on the coil due to the magnetic force at equilibrium

  20. Electric Motor • electric motor - converts electrical energy to mechanical energy • The mechanical energy is in the form of rotational kinetic energy • An electric motor consists of a rigid current-carrying loop that rotates when placed in a magnetic field

  21. Electric Motor • Torque acting on the loop will rotate the loop to smaller values of θ until the torque becomes 0 at θ = 0° • If the loop turns past this point and the current remains in the same direction, the torque reverses and turns the loop in the opposite direction • Bad!!

  22. Electric Motor • So, we need to be clever… • To provide continuous rotation in one direction, the current in the loop must periodically reverse • In AC motors, this reversal naturally occurs • In DC motors, a split-ring commutator and brushes are used • Actual motors would contain many current loops and commutators

  23. Force on a Charged Particle in a Magnetic Field • Consider a particle moving in an external magnetic field so that its velocity is perpendicular to the field • The force is always directed toward the center of the circular path • The magnetic force causes a centripetal acceleration, changing the direction of the velocity of the particle

  24. Force on a Charged Particle • Equating the magnetic and centripetal forces: • Solving for r: • r is proportional to the momentum of the particle and inversely proportional to the magnetic field • Sometimes called the cyclotron equation

  25. Particle Moving in an External Magnetic Field • If the particle’s velocity is not perpendicular to the field, the path followed by the particle is a spiral • The spiral path is called a helix

  26. Example Problem 19.42 • A cosmic ray proton in interstellar space has an energy of 10 MeV and executes a circular orbit having a radius equal to that of Mercury’s orbit around the Sun (5.8 x 1010 m). What is the magnetic field in that region of space?

  27. Solution to 19.31

  28. Solution to 19.42

  29. From last time… • Torque on a current loop: t= B I A N sin q • Magnetic Moment: m = IAN • Electric Motors • Force on a moving charged particle in a magnetic field • Equate centripetal and magnetic forces: • Radius of orbit:

  30. Example Problem 19.42 • A cosmic ray proton in interstellar space has an energy of 10 MeV and executes a circular orbit having a radius equal to that of Mercury’s orbit around the Sun (5.8 x 1010 m). What is the magnetic field in that region of space?

  31. Magnetic Fields – Long Straight Wire • A current-carrying wire produces a magnetic field B • Right hand rule # 2 to determine direction of B • Magnitude of B at a distance r from a wire carrying current of I is: • µo = 4  x 10-7 T.m / A • µois called the permeability of free space

  32. Ampère’s Law: General • relationship between I in an arbitrarily shaped wire and B produced by the wire: B|| Δℓ = µo I • Choose an arbitrary closed path around the current • Sum all the products of B|| Δℓ around the closed path

  33. Ampère’s Law Applied to a Long Straight Wire • Use a closed circular path • The circumference of the circle is 2  r • This is identical to the result previously shown

  34. Example Problem 19.54 • Two long parallel wires separated by a distance 2d carry equal currents in the same direction. The currents are out of the page in the figure. (a) What is the direction of the magnetic field at P on the x-axis set up by the two wires? (b) Find an expression for the magnitude of the field at P. (c) From (b), determine the field midway between the two wires.

  35. Magnetic Force Between Two Parallel Conductors • The force on wire 1 is due to the current in wire 1 and the magnetic field produced by wire 2 • The force per unit length is: • Parallel conductors carrying currents in the same direction attract each other • Parallel conductors carrying currents in the opposite directions repel each other

  36. Magnetic Field of a Current Loop • The magnitude of the magnetic field at the center of a circular loop with a radius R and carrying current I is • With N loops in the coil, this becomes:

  37. Magnetic Field of a Solenoid • Solenoid – long straight wire is bent into a coil of several closely spaced loops • Electromagnet - acts like a magnet only when it carries a current • B field lines inside the solenoid are nearly parallel, uniformly spaced, and close together • B is nearly uniform and strong • The exterior field is nonuniform, much weaker, and in the opposite direction to the field inside the solenoid

  38. Magnetic Field in a Solenoid, Magnitude • The magnitude of the field inside a solenoid is constant at all points far from its ends • B = µo n I • n is the number of turns per unit length • n = N / ℓ • The same result can be obtained by applying Ampère’s Law to the solenoid

  39. Example Problem 19.60 • A certain superconducting magnet in the form of a solenoid of length 0.5 m can generate a magnetic field of 9.0T in its core when the coils carry a current of 75 A. The windings, made of a niobium-titanium alloy, must be cooled to 4.2K. Find the number of turns in the solenoid.

  40. Solution to 19.42

  41. Solution to 19.54

  42. Solution to 19.60

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