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The Biot-Savart Law
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Biot and Savart recognized that a conductor carrying a steady current produces a force on a magnet. Biot and Savart produced an equation that gives the magnetic field at some point in space in terms of the current that produces the field. Biot-Savart law says that if a wire carries a steady current I, the magnetic field dB at some point P associated with an element of conductor length ds has the following properties: –The vector dB is perpendicular to both ds (the direction of the current I) and to the unit vector r hat directed from the element ds to the point P.
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–The magnitude of dB is inversely proportional to r 2, where r is the distance from the element ds to the point P. –The magnitude of dB is proportional to the current I and to the length ds of the element. –The magnitude of dB is proportional to sin , where is the angle between the vectors ds and r hat. Biot-Savart law:
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o is a constant called the permeability of free space; o =4· x 10 -7 Wb/A·m (T·m/A) Biot-Savart law gives the magnetic field at a point for only a small element of the conductor ds. To determine the total magnetic field B at some point due to a conductor of specified size, we must add up every contribution from all elements ds that make up the conductor (integrate)!
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The direction of the magnetic field due to a current carrying element is perpendicular to both the current element ds and the radius vector r hat. The right hand rule can be used to determine the direction of the magnetic field around the current carrying conductor: –Thumb of the right hand in the direction of the current. –Fingers of the right hand curl around the wire in the direction of the magnetic field at that point.
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Magnetic Field of a Thin Straight Conductor Consider a thin, straight wire carrying a constant current I along the x axis. To determine the total magnetic field B at the point P at a distance a from the wire:
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Use the right hand rule to determine that the direction of the magnetic field produced by the conductor at point P is directed out of the page. This is also verified using the vector cross product (ds x r hat ): fingers of right hand in direction of ds; point palm in direction of r hat (curl fingers from ds to r hat ); thumb points in direction of magnetic field B. The cross product (ds x r hat ) = ds·r hat ·sin r hat is a unit vector and the magnitude of a unit vector = 1. (ds x r hat ) = ds·r hat ·sin ds·sin
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Each length of the conductor ds is also a small length along the x axis, dx. Each element of length ds is a distance r from P and a distance x from the midpoint of the conductor O. The angle will also change as r and x change. The values for r, x, and will change for each different element of length ds. Let ds = dx, then ds·sin becomes dx·sin The contribution to the total magnetic field at point P from each element of the conductor ds is:
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The total magnetic field B at point P can be determined by integrating from one end of the conductor to the other end of the conductor. The distance a from the midpoint of the conductor O to the point P remains constant. Express r in terms of a and x. Express sin in terms of a and r.
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For an infinitely long wire: From the table of integrals:
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For a conductor with a finite length: From the table of integrals:
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When the angles are provided: –express r in terms of a and the angle : –Because angles are involved, we need to change dx to d : - Take the derivative of x:
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To determine the magnitude of the magnetic field B, integrate:
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The magnetic field lines are concentric circles that surround the wire in a plane perpendicular to the wire. The magnitude of B is constant on any circle of radius a. The magnitude of the magnetic field B is proportional to the current and decreases as the distance from the wire increases.
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Magnetic Field of a Current Loop To determine the magnetic field B at the point O for the current loop shown:
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The magnetic field at point O due to the straight segments AA' and CC' is zero because ds is parallel to r hat along path AA' and ds is antiparallel to r hat along path CC'. For the curved portion of the conductor from A to C, divide this into small elements of length ds. Each element of length ds is the same distance R away from point O.
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Each element of length ds contributes equally to the total magnetic field B at point O. The direction of the magnetic field B at point O is down into the page. At every point from A to C, ds is perpendicular to r hat, therefore: Integrate from A to C:
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Pull the constant R out in front of the integral and integrate from A to C: The distance s is the arc length from A to C; arc length s = R· . Revising the equation:
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Magnetic Field on the Axis of a Circular Current Loop Consider a circular loop of wire of radius R in the yz plane and carrying a steady current I:
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To determine the magnetic field B at a point P on the axis a distance x from the center of the loop: –Divide the current loop into small elements of length ds. –Each element of length ds is the same distance r to point P on the x axis. –Each element of length ds contributes equally to the total magnetic field B at point P.
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Express r in terms of R and x: Each element of length ds is perpendicular to the unit vector r hat from ds to point P. Substituting into the integral equation:
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Notice that the direction of the magnetic field contribution dB from element of length ds is at an angle with the x axis.
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At point P, the magnetic field contribution from each element of length ds can be resolved into an x component (dB x ) and a y component (dB y ). The dB y component for the magnetic field from an element of length ds on one side of the ring is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction to the dB y component for the magnetic field produced by the element of length ds on the opposite side of the ring (180º away). These dB y components cancel each other.
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The net magnetic field B at point P is the sum of the dB x components for the elements of length ds. The direction of the net magnetic field is along the x axis and directed away from the circular loop.
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Express R 2 + x 2 in terms of an angle : Substituting into the integral equation:
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Pull the constants out in front of the integral: The sum of the elements of length ds around the closed current loop is the circumference of the current loop; s = 2· ·R
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The net magnetic field B at point P is given by:
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To determine the magnetic field strength B at the center of the current loop, set x = 0:
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For large distances along the x axis from the current loop, where x is very large in comparison to R:
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The magnetic dipole of the loop is the product of the current I and the area A of the loop: = I· ·R 2
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