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Published byGeorge Nichols Modified over 9 years ago
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Natural Magnets Magnetite, Fe 3 O 4 (an oxide of iron) Ancient civilizations (Greek 590 BCE, Chinese 2600 BCE) realized that these stones would cling to iron tools. A suspended, pivoting lodestone always pointed along the North-South axis
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Magnetite crystals have been found in living organisms Magnetotactic bacteria! Migratory Bird brains!! Other migratory animals: bees, fish Human brains!!! YOU HAVE ROCKS IN YOUR HEAD!!!!!
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By 2 nd Century AD, Chinese were able to make permanent magnets by repeatedly stroking an iron rod or needle from end to end along a lodestone, but always in the same direction. Retained strength of a magnet depends on chemical properties of the metal. Soft iron: loses magnetism quickly Low-carbon soft steel (paper clips, nails): gradual loss Hard steel: retains power for a long time and is referred to as a “permanent magnet”
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Magnets produce a force on other objects Poles are regions where the magnetic force is the strongest Like magnetic poles repel. Opposite magnetic poles attract. Most magnets have two poles (dipole), but can have three or more!
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Monopole: piece of a magnet that is simply a north pole or a south pole Many have tried to isolate a monopole by breaking magnets in half. No matter how we break a magnet, the pieces are always dipoles! A monopole cannot be isolated. Do not pass GO. Do not collect $200.
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Every magnet establishes in the space surrounding it, a magnetic field (B-field) Map field with a test-compass Direction of field is direction in which the test- compass needle will point at that location. Draw field lines so that compass always points tangent to the field lines. Field lines point from N to S outside the magnet Field lines point from S to N inside the magnet Field lines form closed loops Field lines never intersect SI unit for B (magnetic field strength) is the tesla (T)
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Mapping with Test-Compass Field Lines Form Closed Loops Field Mapped by Iron Filings
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Magnetic field has reversed direction ~300 times in the past 170 million years Magnetic poles wander! Magnetic & geographic poles not the same. Magnetic declination: 11.5° What’s strange about this picture?
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Domain: region where many atomic dipoles are aligned Usually aligned randomly and effects cancel BUT… Place ferromagnetic material in strong B-field Entire domains realign with applied field Size & shape of domains remains the same Causes irreversible re-orientation of domains Creates permanent magnets
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Domains are not aligned Electrons in domains align with applied field Substance is Permanently Magnetized
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Not everybody is an artist. Use 2-D images to draw 3-D field vectors. If field points perpendicularly into the page or board, use If field points perpendicularly out of the page or board, use Otherwise, draw the lines neatly. Don’t forget, field lines are vectors! X
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Magnetism is caused by charge in motion. Charges at rest have just an electric field But, when they move, they generate both an electric field and a magnetic field Can look at individual charges or electric current in a wire Direction of current determines direction of the magnetic field. Use right hand rules for analysis.
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Slide 16 Fig 19.15b, p.678 First Right Hand Rule: thumb points in direction of current, fingers curl in direction of magnetic field- note compass readings. Use for current-carrying wire.
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B: magnetic field strength (teslas) I: current (amperes) r: radius from wire (meters) μ o : permeability constant in a vacuum μ o = 4π x 10 -7 T·m/A What is the shape of this magnetic field?
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Slide 20 Fig 19.20b, p.682 1 st Right Hand Rule- Thumb points in the direction of the current, fingers curl in the direction of the created magnetic field – up through the coils and around the outside. Use for current-carrying loop or solenoid coil.
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How is this equation different from the mag field of a straight wire? The strength of the field is more in a loop than in the straight wire and a single loop. where n is the NUMBER of loops (in this example n=8)
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Charge in motion (electric current) produces magnetic force Electrons function as a subatomic dipole Electron “spin” (Much More) Electrons existing in pairs: B-fields cancel Electron “orbit” around nucleus (Very Little) Random “orbits” of electrons: B-fields cancel
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Even “non magnetic” materials respond to an applied B-field Applied B-field changes orbital motion of electrons Produces a field that opposes applied field Repelled by applied field Diamagnetic materials have no permanent atomic dipoles Occurs for all substances, but may be swamped by other magnetic effects
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Paramagnetic materials are attracted when placed in a strong B-field. Composed of atoms with permanent atomic dipoles Atomic dipoles do not interact w/ one another Atomic dipoles oriented randomly Material has no dipole as a whole A strong B-field re-orients these atomic dipoles in same direction as applied field
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Naturally “magnetic”: magnetite, iron, nickel, cobalt, steel, Alnico, other alloys Strongly attracted to poles of a magnet Easily magnetized Atomic dipoles interact strongly with dipoles of adjacent atoms Dipoles align spontaneously, w/o an applied field Many atomic dipoles cooperatively align Creates regions of parallel orientations (domains)
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Gives the direction of the FORCE exerted on a current (or charge) by an external magnetic field Point thumb of RH in direction of current (or motion of positive charge) Point fingers through in direction of magnetic field Palm pushes in direction of force
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Thumb points to v, which is direction of velocity of positive charge Fingers point to B, the direction of magnetic field lines. Deflecting force is shown by direction of palm pushing.
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F = qvB·sin Θ B: field strength in teslas (T) q: charge in coulombs (C) v: charge velocity in m/s Θ: angle between v & B
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F = B·I·L B: field strength in teslas (T) I: current in amperes (A) L: length of current-carrying wire in meters (m)
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