Title: Magnetism
1Chapter 19
2- Magnetic Fields II
- Sections 610
3Motion of a Charged Particle in a Uniform
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
4Motion of a Charged Particle in a Uniform
Magnetic Field, cont
- Equating the magnetic and centripetal forces
- Solving for the radius r
- r is proportional to the momentum mv of the
particle and inversely proportional to the
magnetic field - Sometimes called the cyclotron equation
Active Figure Motion of a Charged Particle in a
Uniform Magnetic Field
5The Mass Spectrometer Separating Isotopes
- The cyclotron equation can be applied to
the process of separating isotopes - Singly ionized isotopes are injected into a
velocity selector - Only those isotopes with velocity v E/B pass
into the deflection chamberWhy?
- Isotopes travel in different circular paths
governed by the cyclotron equationtherefore
different mass isotopes separate
Active Figure The Mass Spectrometer
6Particle Moving in an External Magnetic Field
- If the particles velocity is not perpendicular
to the magnetic field, the path followed by the
particle is a spiral - The spiral path is called a helix
Active Figure A Charged Particle with a Helical
Path
7Charged Particles Trapped in the Earths
Magnetic FieldAuroras
- Charged particles from the Sun enter the Earths
magnetic field - These particles move in spirals around the lines
of magnetic field - This causes them to become trapped in the Earths
magnetic field
- An aurora is caused by these trapped charged
particles colliding with atoms in the upper
atmosphereproducing beautiful displays of light
8Hans Christian Oersted
- 1777 1851
- Best known for observing that a compass needle
deflects when placed near a wire carrying a
current - First evidence of a connection between electric
and magnetic phenomena
9Magnetic Fields Long Straight Wire
- A current-carrying wire produces a magnetic field
- The compass needle deflects in directions tangent
to the circle - The compass needle points in the direction of the
magnetic field produced by the current
Active Figure Magnetic Field Due to a Long
Straight Wire
10Direction of the Field of a Long Straight Wire
- Right Hand Rule 2
- Grasp the wire in your right hand
- Point your thumb in the direction of the current
- Your fingers will curl in the direction of the
field
11Magnitude of the Field of a Long Straight Wire
- The magnitude of the field at a distance r from a
wire carrying a current of I is - µo 4 ? x 10-7 T.m / A
- µo is called the permeability of free space
12André-Marie Ampère
- 1775 1836
- Credited with the discovery of electromagnetism
- Relationship between electric currents and
magnetic fields - Mathematical genius evident by age 12
13Ampères Law
- André-Marie Ampère found a procedure for deriving
the relationship between the current in a wire
and the magnetic field produced by the wire - Ampères Circuital Law
- ?B ?l µo I
- Sum over the closed path around the current I
- Choose an arbitrary closed path around the
current - Sum all the products of B ?l around the closed
path
14Ampères Law to Find B for a Long Straight Wire
- Sum over a closed circular path around current I
- ?B ?l µo I
- Sum all products B ?l around the closed path
- B2?r µo I
- The magnitude of the magnetic field a distance r
from the wire
15Magnetic Field of a Current Loop
- The strength of a magnetic field produced by a
wire can be enhanced by forming the wire into a
loop - All the segments, ?x, contribute to the field,
increasing its strength - The magnitude of the magnetic field at the center
of a circular loop with a radius R
16Magnetic Field of a Current Loop Total Field
17Magnetic Field of a Solenoid
- If a long straight wire is bent into a coil of
several closely spaced loops, the resulting
device is called a solenoid - It is also known as an electromagnet since it
acts like a magnet only when it carries a current
18Magnetic Field of a Solenoid, 2
- The field lines inside the solenoid are nearly
parallel, uniformly spaced, and close together - This indicates that the field inside the solenoid
is nearly uniform and strong - The exterior field is nonuniform, much weaker,
and in the opposite direction to the field inside
the solenoid
19Magnetic Field in a Solenoid, 3
- The field lines of the solenoid resemble those of
a bar magnet dipole magnetic field
20Magnetic Field in a Solenoid from Ampères Law
- A cross-sectional view of a tightly wound
solenoid - If the solenoid is long compared to its radius,
we assume the field inside is uniform and outside
is zero - Apply Ampères Law to the blue dashed rectangle
- The magnitude of the field inside a solenoid is
constant at all points far from its ends - n is the number of turns per unit length
- n N / l
21Magnetic 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
22Force Between Two Conductors, cont
- Parallel conductors carrying currents in the same
direction attract each other - Parallel conductors carrying currents in the
opposite directions repel each other
Active Figure Force Between Long Parallel Wires
23Defining Ampere and Coulomb
- The force between parallel conductors can be used
to define the Ampere (A) - If two long, parallel wires 1 m apart carry the
same current, and the magnitude of the magnetic
force per unit length is 2 x 10-7 N/m, then the
current is defined to be 1 A - The SI unit of charge, the Coulomb (C), can be
defined in terms of the Ampere - If a conductor carries a steady current of 1 A,
then the quantity of charge that flows through
any cross section in 1 second is 1 C
24Magnetic Effects of Electrons Orbits
- An individual atom should act like a magnet
because of the motion of the electrons about the
nucleus - Each electron circles the atom once in about
every 10-16 seconds - This would produce a current of 1.6 mA and a
magnetic field of about 20 T at the center of the
circular path - However, the magnetic field produced by one
electron in an atom is often canceled by an
oppositely revolving electron in the same atom - The net result is that the magnetic effect
produced by electrons orbiting the nucleus is
either zero or very small for most materials
25Magnetic Effects of Electrons Spins
- Electrons also have spin
- The classical model is to consider the electrons
to spin like tops - It is actually a quantum effect
26Magnetic Effects of Electrons Spins, cont
- The field due to the spinning is generally
stronger than the field due to the orbital motion - Electrons usually pair up with their spins
opposite each other, so their fields cancel each
other - That is why most materials are not naturally
magnetic
27Magnetic Effects of Electrons Domains
- In some materials, the spins do not naturally
cancel - Such materials are called ferromagnetic
- Large groups of atoms in which the spins are
aligned are called domains - When an external field is applied, the domains
that are aligned with the field tend to grow at
the expense of the others - This causes the material to become magnetized
28Domains, cont
- Random alignment (left) shows an unmagnetized
material - When an external field is applied, the domains
aligned with B grow (right)
29Domains and Permanent Magnets
- In hard magnetic materials, the domains remain
aligned after the external field is removed - The result is a permanent magnet
- In soft magnetic materials, once the external
field is removed, thermal agitation causes the
materials to quickly return to an unmagnetized
state
- When a ferromagnetic core is placed inside a
current-carrying loop, the magnetic field is
enhanced since the domains in the core material
align, increasing the magnetic field