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Published byLawrence Little Modified over 9 years ago
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Maxwell’s Equations (so far…) *Not complete
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for fields made by charges at rest. Can a distribution of static charges make this field? Electrostatic forces are conservative. The change in potential around a loop must be zero.
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means: No curly electric fields. BUT: This is only true for “Coulomb” fields (fields caused by stationary charges).
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There is another way to make electric fields.
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Where there is a time-varying magnetic field, there is also a curly electric field.
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Curly electric field (both inside and outside solenoid)
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No curly electric field
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We call the curly electric fields Non-Coulomb electric fields E NC They are related to magnetic fields that are changing in time:
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Which direction does the electric field curl?
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Right thumb along Fingers curl in direction of
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Which direction does the electric field curl?
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What if we put a conducting wire around the solenoid? A current is induced in the wire.
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Solenoid B increasing Metal wire How big is the current i 2 ?
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EMF (ElectroMotive Force) EMF is actually not a force. It is the energy per unit charge added to a circuit during a single round trip. EMF = Units: Volts
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Metal wire EMF = Solenoid B increasing
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Metal wire (Ohm’s Law) 电阻 Solenoid B increasing
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We can measure E NC by measuring the induced current.
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Experiments: i 2 is only present when i 1 is changing. EMF
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Experiments: i 2 is proportional to the area of the solenoid. EMF
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Faraday’s Law This is the magnetic flux through the loop. EMF
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Faraday’s Law The EMF around a closed path is equal to the rate of change of the magnetic flux inside the path. EMF
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Faraday’s Law The EMF around a closed path is equal to the rate of change of the magnetic flux inside the path.
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