Title: Physics 212 Lecture 17, Slide 1
1Physics 212 Lecture 17
2Music
- Who is the Artist?
- Oscar Peterson
- Kenny Barron
- Dave Brubeck
- Thelonius Monk
- Marcus Roberts
CD
Piano Master ! Why? Hes
playing tomorrow at Krannert
Jazz and Barbeque !! Sold out since June,
though sigh
3Last Time
time t dt e Bav0
A rectangular loop (sides a,b, resistance R,
mass m) coasts with a constant velocity v0 in
x direction as shown. At t 0, the loop enters a
region of constant magnetic field B directed in
the z direction. What is the velocity of the
loop when half of it is in the field?
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x
a
x
4Calculation
t dt e Bav0
y
A rectangular loop (sides a,b, resistance R,
mass m) coasts with a constant velocity v0 in
x direction as shown. At t 0, the loop enters a
region of constant magnetic field B directed in
the z direction. What is the velocity of the
loop when half of it is in the field?
B
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x
b
v0
a
x
This is not obvious, but we know v must decrease
( all that was asked on the exam) !! Why?
Fright points to left Acceleration
negative Speed must decrease
5Calculation
y
A rectangular loop (sides a,b, resistance R,
mass m) coasts with a constant velocity v0 in
x direction as shown. At t 0, the loop enters a
region of constant magnetic field B directed in
the z direction. What is the velocity of the
loop when half of it is in the field?
B
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x
b
v0
a
x
e Bav0
Which of these plots best represents the
velocity as a function of time as the loop moves
form entering the field to halfway through ?
(A) (D)
- Why (D), not (A)?
- F is not constant, depends on v
Challenge Look at energy
6Follow-Up
y
A rectangular loop (sides a,b, resistance R,
mass m) coasts with a constant velocity v0 in
x direction as shown. At t 0, the loop enters a
region of constant magnetic field B directed in
the z direction. Some time later it leaves the
region as shown What is the direction of the net
force on the loop in the position shown?
B
x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
x x x x x x x x x x x
b
v
a
x
(A) y (B) -y (C) x
(D) -x (E) no net force
Flux is decreasing into the screen
Force on loop decreases speed as it must Energy
being dissipated in heating resistance
7Prelecture 17
8Things you identified as difficult
The stuff involving the calculations of the
inductor, in the prelecture. Please explain the
direction of the current during discharge. The
current stuff with the switches and infinity In
the prelecture there was talk of a voltage jump
on the inductor after switches were thrown
disconnecting it from a battery. This was
confusing.
9From the prelecture
10What this really means
Voltage induced across L tries to keep I constant
L
current I
Inductors hate it when the current changes
11Inside your i-clicker
12I
L
R
13How to think about RL circuits Episode 1 When no
current is flowing initially
I0
L
R
VBATT
14How to think about RL circuits Episode 2 When
steady current is flowing initially
IV/R
L
R
15VL
VBATT
t L/R
Lecture
Prelecture
No The resistance is simply twice as big in one
case.
16Circuit in Preflight
L
R
IL0
V
R
Current through inductor cant change abruptly
174) In the circuit above, the switch has been open
for a long time, and the current is zero
everywhere. At time t0 the switch is closed.
What is the current I through the vertical
resistor immediately after the switch is closed?
( is in the direction of the arrow) A)Â I
V/R B)Â I V/2R C)Â I 0 D)Â I -V/2R E)Â I
-V/R
18Circuit in Preflight
L
R
IL
V
0 (current all going through the
short circuit inductor)
R
A long time later the current in the circuit is
no-longer changing.
VL 0
Inductor looks like a short circuit
195) In the circuit above, the switch has been open
for a long time, and the current is zero
everywhere. At time t0 the switch is closed.
What is the current I through the vertical
resistor after the switch has been closed for a
long time? ( is in the direction of the arrow)
A)Â I V/R B)Â I V/2R C)Â I 0 D)Â I -V/2R
E)Â I -V/R
20Circuit in Preflight
L
R
ILV/R
V
R
Current through inductor cant change abruptly.
I is the same just before and just after switch
opens V/R.
217) After a long time, the switch is opened,
abruptly disconnecting the battery from the
circuit.
What is the current I through the vertical
resistor immediately after the switch is
opened? ( is in the direction of the arrow)
A)Â I V/R B)Â I V/2R C)Â I 0 D)Â I -V/2R
E)Â I -V/R
221) Two solenoids are made with the same cross
sectional area and total number of turns.
Inductor B is twice as long as inductor A
Compare the inductance of the two solenoids
A)Â LA 4 LB B)Â LA 2 LB C)Â LA LB D)Â LA
(1/2) LB E)Â LA (1/4) LB
232)Â Â You are given 50 meters of wire and told you
must make the largest inductor you can, with the
constraint that its total volume must be 25 cm3.
Which geometry will give the greatest inductance?
(You may assume the inductance is given by the
formula derived for an infinite solenoid.) A)Â A
shorter solenoid with larger cross section B)Â A
longer solenoid with a smaller cross section
C)Â It doesn't matter, once the volume and length
of wire are specified, the inductance is
determined
D 50m N x 2pr
N D / 2pr
n N/z D / 2prz
24Calculation
The switch in the circuit shown has been open for
a long time. At t 0, the switch is
closed. What is dIL/dt, the time rate of change
of the current through the inductor immediately
after switch is closed
R1
R2
V
L
R3
C
- Conceptual Analysis
- Once switch is closed, currents will flow through
this 2-loop circuit. - KVR and KCR can be used to determine currents as
a function of time.
- Strategic Analysis
- Determine currents immediately after switch is
closed. - Determine voltage across inductor immediately
after switch is closed. - Determine dIL/dt immediately after switch is
closed.
25Calculation
The switch in the circuit shown has been open for
a long time. At t 0, the switch is
closed. What is dIL/dt, the time rate of change
of the current through the inductor immediately
after switch is closed
R1
R2
V
L
R3
INDUCTORS Current cannot change discontinuously
!
26Calculation
The switch in the circuit shown has been open for
a long time. At t 0, the switch is
closed. What is dIL/dt, the time rate of change
of the current through the inductor immediately
after switch is closed
R1
R2
V
L
R3
IL(t0) 0
We know IL 0 immediately after switch is closed
27Calculation
The switch in the circuit shown has been open for
a long time. At t 0, the switch is
closed. What is dIL/dt, the time rate of change
of the current through the inductor immediately
after switch is closed
R1
R2
V
L
R3
I2(t0) V/(R1R2R3)
VL(t0) 0
The voltage across the inductor, VL, is also
equal to the voltage across R2 R3 The voltage
across R2 R3 I2(R2 R3) Therefore
28Calculation
The switch in the circuit shown has been open for
a long time. At t 0, the switch is
closed. What is dIL/dt, the time rate of change
of the current through the inductor immediately
after switch is closed
R1
R2
V
L
R3
VL(t0) V(R2R3)/(R1R2R3)
The time rate of change of current through the
indu ctor (dIL /dt) VL /L
29Follow Up 1
The switch in the circuit shown has been closed
for a long time. What is I2, the current
through R2 ? (Positive values indicate current
flows to the right)
R1
R2
V
L
R3
After a long time, dI/dt 0 Therefore, the
voltage across L 0 Therefore the voltage across
R2 R3 0 Therefore the current through R2 R3
must be zero !!
30Follow Up 2
The switch in the circuit shown has been closed
for a long time. At t 0, the switch is
opened. What is I2, the current through R2
immediately after switch is opened ? (Positive
values indicate current flows to the right)
R1
R2
IL
V
L
R3
Current through inductor immediately AFTER switch
is opened IS THE SAME AS the current through
inductor immediately BEFORE switch is opened
Immediately BEFORE switch is opened IL V/R1
Immediately AFTER switch is opened IL flows in
right loop Therefore, IL -V/R1
31Strategy Question
A solenoid inductor with I 3A flowing through
its turns, has a volume 0f 1.5X10-3 m3. A
uniform B field inside the solenoid fills this
volume and has a magnitude of 0.08 T. Find the
total heat generated in the resistor R2 35W,
after the switch is opened and the current falls
to zero.
R1
B
V
R2
- Question Where do we start? What is our
strategy?
- This is a little different. My plan had been to
see if anyone could suggest a strategy. - Since we didnt have time to get to this
question, Ill suggest one. - We are given the current, the volume, and the
magnetic field. - We can use the values for B and the volume to
calculate the total energy stored in the
inductor. - We can then assume that all of this energy will
eventually be dissipated as heat in the resistor.
32Strategy Question
A solenoid inductor with 3A flowing through its
turns, has a volume 0f 1.5X10-3 m3. A uniform B
field inside the solenoid fills this volume and
has a magnitude of 0.08 T. The total heat
generated in the resistor R 35W, is 3.82 J.
What is the inductance of the solenoid?
R1
B
V
R2
- Question Where do we start? What is our
strategy?
- This is a little different. My plan had been to
see if anyone could suggest a strategy. - Since we didnt have time to get to this
question, Ill suggest one. - We can now use the current I to answer this
question - The total energy stored in an inductor is ½ LI2
- We calculated the total energy on the previous
slide (would have been 3.82 J) - Use the current and total energy to calculate L