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Chapter 20 Magnetism. Magnets. The ends of a bar magnet are called poles Like poles repel and unlike poles attract Regardless of their shape, all magnets have a north and south pole. Magnetic Fields . Magnetic Field lines point from the north pole to the south pole of the magnet
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Magnets • The ends of a bar magnet are called poles • Like poles repel and unlike poles attract • Regardless of their shape, all magnets have a north and south pole
Magnetic Fields • Magnetic Field lines point from the north pole to the south pole of the magnet • The north pole of a compass needle always points in the direction of the field (from North to South)
Magnetic Field of the Earth • The Earth’s geographic North pole is actually the magnetic south pole • The north pole of a compass points towards geographic north and since opposites attract, we know that the Earth’s geographic pole is magnetic south
Magnetic Force • A charge moving through a magnetic field experiences a force q= magnitude of charge v= speed of charge B= Strength of the magnetic field (measured in Tesla, T) θ= angle between v and B (F=0 if θ=0)
A second Right-Hand Rule • Of course, force is a vector! • To find the direction of the magnetic force use another right hand rule • Fingers point in direction of the field • Thumb points in direction of v • Palm points in direction of magnetic force
Conventions for direction of field WARNING: The right hand rule is for the direction of the force acting on a POSITIVE CHARGE. To find the direction of the force acting on a negative charge, you’ll have to use the rule and change the sign!
Path of a charge in a magnetic field • The path of a charged particle moving perpendicular to a magnetic field is a circle (p.595) • The magnetic force acting on the particle acts like the centripetal force
Magnetic Field of a wire • Moving charges produce magnetic fields • If there is a current moving through a wire, a magnetic field is produced around the wire • I is current, r is perpendicular to wire • µo=4π x 10-7 Tm/A
Magnetic Field of a wire • The “Right Hand Rule” for the magnetic field • Point your thumb in the direction of the current and curl your fingers in the direction of the field
Force on a current carrying wire • A magnet exerts a force on a current-carrying wire • I= current • l= length of wire • B= magnitude of magnetic field • Θ is the angle between the direction of current and the magnetic field • If current is parallel to B, F=0 (F=0 if θ=0)
The Right-Hand Rule revised • Of course, force is a vector! • To find the direction of the magnetic force use another right hand rule • Fingers point in direction of the field • Thumb points in direction of I • Palm points in direction of magnetic force I
Force between two current carrying wires • Two current-carrying wires exert a force on each other • If the currents are moving in the same direction the wires attract each other • If the currents are moving in opposite directions, the wires repel • 2.0x10-7 Tm/A= µo/2π • I= current • l= length of wire • L= distance between wires
Electromagnetic Induction (Ch 20) • Michael Faraday discovered the phenomenon of electromagnetic induction • A changing magnetic field can produce an electric current (induced current) • B must be changing for this to work Moving a magnet through a coil of wire produces a current
Magnetic Flux • Magnetic Flux is proportional to the number of field lines passing through some area • The angle θ is the angle between B and a line drawn perpendicular to the surface • If θ is 90, no lines pass through the area, so flux is 0 • Unit for flux is the Weber (1Wb= 1 Tm2 )
Faraday’s Law of Induction • Recall what electromagnetic induction is. A changing magnetic field induces a current • Faraday’s Law mathematically: • N represents the number of loops in the wire • ΔΦB is the change in magnetic flux
Lenz’s Law • The negative sign indicates that the induced current’s magnetic field is always opposite to the original change in flux • Changing flux induces an emf, which induces a current • That current then produces its own magnetic field • That magnetic field points in the opposite direction of the change in flux
Lenz’s Law Direction of the magnetic field produced by the induced current? • A. Down • B. Up
More Practice with Lenz’s Law In which direction is the current induced in the coil for each situation? • Current produced will be counterclockwise to produce a field that points out • of the page b. The area decreases, so flux decreases. Current will be clockwise to produce A field that points into the page c. Initially flux is out of the page. Moving the coil means the flux decreases. Induced current will be counterclockwise to produce a field out of the pge d. Field lines and surface are parallel so there is no flux, so no current is induced e. Flux will increase to the left so the current will be counterclockwise to produce a Field to the right
Induced EMF for moving conductor • What if the magnet is stationary and the wire is moved instead? • This is called motional emf • B= magnetic field • l= length of wire • v= speed
Sample Problem p. 655 #15 • B= 0.450 T • R= 0.230 Ω • v= 3.40 m/s Calculate the force required to pull the loop from the field at a constant velocity of 3.4 m/s
How do we get force? • We have l, B what’s I? • Ohm’s Law I= V/R. • We have R…what’s V?? • Law of induction!: • V=Blv=0.5355 V • I=V/R=0.5355V/0.230 Ω= 2.33 A • F=IlB= (2.33A)(0.350m)(0.450 T)= 0.367 N