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Sources of Magnetic Fields

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Chapter 30 Sources of Magnetic Fields Hans Christian Oersted College professor in Copenhagen 1820 Discovered that current running through a wire would deflect a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sources of Magnetic Fields


1
Chapter 30
  • Sources of Magnetic Fields

2
Hans Christian Oersted
  • College professor in Copenhagen
  • 1820Discovered that current running through a
    wire would deflect a compass
  • By accident, while doing demos
  • Had no idea how or why it happened
  • Published in Latin, so at least he sounded smart

1777-1851
43 years old in 1820
3
Andre-Marie Ampere
  • Father was guillotined during the French
    revolution, and his wife died young in 1803
  • Picked up on Oersteds work
  • Defined the connection between current and
    magnetism by examining forces between parallel
    wires

1775-1836
45 years old in 1820
4
Michael Faraday
  • Started life as a book binder
  • Discovers that moving magnets will produce an
    induced current in wires that arent even
    connected to a power source
  • First to describe electric and magnetic forces
    using fields
  • Remember, the idea that invisible lines are
    running everywhere, and that we can count them,
    is not exactly self-evident

1791-1867
29 years old in 1820
5
James Clerk Maxwell
  • Summarizes everyones findings mathematically
  • Demonstrates the connection between electric
    fields and magnetic fields
  • Discovers and defines electromagnetic waves
  • Sorta mathematically discovered the precise speed
    of light

1831-1879
6
Biot-Savart Law
  • Way of calculating the magnetic field due to a
    segment of current carrying wire
  • dB section of magnetic field caused by the
    current
  • I current
  • dl section of length of wire
  • r distance between dl and the point in space

7
Magnetic field of a wire
  • Field lines circle around the wire
  • Direction from a right hand rule
  • Thumb current
  • Fingers wrap around in the direction of the
    circular field lines
  • Equation of straight wires
  • r distance from wire
  • ?0 4? x 10-7 Tm/A
  • Permeability of free space

8
Magnetic field of a loop
  • In circular loops, the magnetic fields line up
    and add up in the middle
  • Equation for center of loop
  • R radius of the loop
  • N number of loops

9
Magnetic field of solenoids
  • When you loop enough times that the length of the
    coil is significantly greater than the radius of
    each loop, its called a solenoid
  • The magnetic field inside is greatly enhanced and
    truly matches a bar magnet
  • Equation
  • N number of loops
  • L length

10
Force between parallel wires
  • Each wire is affected by the others B-field
  • Equation for B-field of wire 1 is given
  • The force on wire 2 is F ILB
  • Attract if currents run in same direction
  • Repel if currents run in opposite directions

11
Definition of Ampere
  • Ampere is defined by the magnetic forces between
    wires
  • When two currents are identical in the wires, and
    F/L 2 x 10-7N/m, each current is defined as 1A.
  • Coulomb is defined by the Ampere
  • 1C of charge flows through a wire with 1A of
    current in 1s

12
Amperes Law
  • Useful for systems with good magnetic symmetry
  • Similar to Gausss law for electric fields
  • Funny shaped fields just make the math messier
  • Integral represents area inside a closed loop
  • B magnetic field
  • ds portion of length around a the loop
  • I total current running through the enclosed
    area

13
Inside a wire
14
A torroid
15
Force on a current segment
16
Solenoids, reloaded
17
Magnetic Flux
  • Flux (?B)the number of field lines passing
    through a given area
  • Units of Webers (Wb)
  • 1 Wb 1 Tm2
  • ? angle between plane of the loop and the
    B-lines

For constant B-fields
18
Magnetic Flux
19
Gausss Law, magnetic style
  • Net magnetic flux through any closed surface is
    zero
  • All field lines going in must go out
  • Electrical flux does not have to equal zero
    because positive charges can exist separate from
    negative ones
  • Magnetic poles cannot be isolated from one another
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