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(T1) Shockley Solution

This document provides a solution to a theoretical question about the Shockley-James paradox regarding the magnetic field created by a large loop and its effect on a small loop placed at the center. The solution involves calculating the flux through the small loop, the mutual inductance between the loops, the electromotive force and electric field induced, as well as the momentum, hidden momentum, and magnetic moments involved. It determines that the results for magnetic moment are identical whether considering the magnetic field or hidden momentum perspectives. The key effects are that the potential energy difference between the near and far sides of the loop vanishes and conservation of the center-of-mass velocity requires the induced back-reaction of the external charges on the induced charges to be
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views

(T1) Shockley Solution

This document provides a solution to a theoretical question about the Shockley-James paradox regarding the magnetic field created by a large loop and its effect on a small loop placed at the center. The solution involves calculating the flux through the small loop, the mutual inductance between the loops, the electromotive force and electric field induced, as well as the momentum, hidden momentum, and magnetic moments involved. It determines that the results for magnetic moment are identical whether considering the magnetic field or hidden momentum perspectives. The key effects are that the potential energy difference between the near and far sides of the loop vanishes and conservation of the center-of-mass velocity requires the induced back-reaction of the external charges on the induced charges to be
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Theoretical Question 1: The Shockley-James Paradox

SOLUTION
a. The magnetic field created by the large loop at its center is:

Since
by:

, this is the field throughout the area of the small loop. Therefore, the flux through the small loop is given

The mutual inductance is then given by:

b. Since

, we have:

Taking the derivative with respect to time, this becomes:

c. The EMF is work per unit charge, while the electric field is force per unit charge. Therefore:

d. The electric field from part (c) leads to a force:

Integrating over

(and disregarding the sign), we get the impulse:

e. The current can be written as:

where

is the charge carriers velocity. We therefore have:


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The momentum is then given by:

where

) )

is the Lorentz factor associated with .

f. The hidden momentum is due to the charge carriers in the two vertical sides of the loop. Let be the mass of the
charge carriers, let be their charge, and let
be the potential energy difference for a charge carrier
between the two sides. Denote the longitudinal densities and velocities of the charges in the two sides by , ,
and . Let and be the appropriate Lorentz factors. From the constant value of the current, we have:

Energy conservation for the charge carriers passing from one side to the other reads:
(

The total momentum now reads:


(
Note that all the microscopic quantities
g) In part (d), the magnetic moment is

In part (f), the magnetic moment is

, ,

)
and

have dropped out.

, and we get:

, and we get:

We see that the results are identical.


h) The answer is (A)+(C). (A) is true because
between the near side and the far side of the loop vanishes. (B)
cannot be true, because the back-reaction of the induced charges on the external charge is a higher-order effect; for
instance, it involves higher powers of . Then the conservation of center-of-mass velocity requires that (C) is true.

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