0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views

Physics 2102

This document discusses the Biot-Savart law for calculating magnetic fields produced by electric currents. It provides an overview of the Biot-Savart law, explaining that the magnetic field from an element of current-carrying wire is determined by the current, length of the element, and its orientation relative to the point where the field is calculated. Examples are given for calculating the field from a straight wire and a circular loop. Forces between parallel and antiparallel current-carrying wires are also summarized.

Uploaded by

ben sen
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views

Physics 2102

This document discusses the Biot-Savart law for calculating magnetic fields produced by electric currents. It provides an overview of the Biot-Savart law, explaining that the magnetic field from an element of current-carrying wire is determined by the current, length of the element, and its orientation relative to the point where the field is calculated. Examples are given for calculating the field from a straight wire and a circular loop. Forces between parallel and antiparallel current-carrying wires are also summarized.

Uploaded by

ben sen
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Physics 2102

Jonathan Dowling

Physics 2102
Lecture 15
Biot-Savart Law

Jean-Baptiste Biot Felix Savart


(1774-1862) (1791–1841)
What Are We Going to Learn?
A Road Map
• Electric charge
 Electric force on other electric charges
 Electric field, and electric potential
• Moving electric charges : current
• Electronic circuit components: batteries, resistors, capacitors
• Electric currents  Magnetic field
 Magnetic force on moving charges
• Time-varying magnetic field  Electric Field
• More circuit components: inductors.
• Electromagnetic waves  light waves
• Geometrical Optics (light rays).
• Physical optics (light waves)
Electric Current:
A Source of Magnetic Field
• Observation: an
electric current
creates a magnetic
field
I
• Simple experiment:
B
hold a current-
carrying wire near a
compass needle! Wire with
current
INTO page

B
Yet Another Right Hand Rule!
• Point your thumb along the direction of the
current in a straight wire
• The magnetic field created by the current i
consists of circular loops directed along your B
curled fingers.
• The magnetic field gets weaker with distance.
• You can apply this to ANY straight wire (even Direction of B??? i
a small differential element!)
• What if you have a curved wire? Break into
small elements.
Superposition
• Magnetic fields (like electric OUT OUT
fields) can be “superimposed” --
just do a vector sum of B from
different sources
• The figure shows four wires
located at the 4 corners of a
square. They carry equal
currents in directions indicated
• What is the direction of B at the IN
center of the square? IN

B
Biot-Savart Law
When we computed the electric field due to charges we used
Coulomb’s law. If one had a large irregular object, one broke it
into infinitesimal pieces and computed,
r 1 dq Which we write as, r r
dq r
dE = rˆ dE =
4!" 0 r 2
4!" 0 r 3

If you wish to compute the magnetic field due to a


current in a wire, you use the law of Biot and Savart.
The Biot-Savart Law
Jean-Baptiste r Felix Savart
Biot (1774-1862)
dL (1791-1841)
• Quantitative rule for i
computing the magnetic field r
r
from any electric current r r
• Choose a differential element r µ 0 idL ! r
of wire of length dL and dB =
carrying a current i 4" r 3

• The field dB from this element


at a point located by the vector r
r dq r
r is given by the Biot-Savart Compare with dE =
Law 4!" 0 r 3

µ0 =4πx10 Tm/A
-7

(permeability constant)
Biot-Savart Law
• An infinitely long straight wire
carries a current i.
• Determine the magnetic field
generated at a point located at a
perpendicular distance R from r µ 0 idsr ! rr
the wire. dB =
4" r 3
• Choose an element ds as shown
µ 0 ids (r sin ! )
• Biot-Savart Law: dB points dB =
INTO the page
4" r 3

"
µ 0i ds (r sin $ )
4% #!"
• Integrate over all such elements B=
r3
Field of a Straight Wire
r µ 0 idsr ! rr µ 0 ids (r sin ! )
dB = dB =
4" r 3 4" r3

sin ! = R / r r = ( s 2 + R 2 )1/ 2

" "
µ 0i ds (r sin $ ) µ 0i Rds
! 4$ #!" (s 2 + R 2 )3 / 2
B= =
4% #" r 3

"
µ 0i Rds
2# !0 (s 2 + R 2 )3 / 2
=
!
µ 0iR ' s $ µ 0i
= % 2 2 1/ 2 " =
2( %& R (s + R ) "#
2
2!R
0
Example : A Practical Matter
A power line carries a µ 0i
B=
current of 500 A. What is 2!R
the magnetic field in a house
located 100 m away from (4!x10 "7 T .m / A)(500 A)
the power line? =
2! (100m)
= 1 µT!!

Recall that the earth’s magnetic


field is ~10–4T = 100 µT
Biot-Savart Law
• A circular arc of wire of radius
R carries a current i. i
• What is the magnetic field at
the center of the loop?
r µ 0 i ds ! rr
dB = Direction of B?? Not another
4" r 3 right hand rule?!
TWO right hand rules!:
µ 0 idsR µ 0 iRd! If your thumb points along the
dB = = CURRENT, your fingers will
4" R 3
4" R 2
point in the same direction as the
FIELD.
µ0 id! µ0i# If you curl our fingers around
B=
4" R$ =
4" R
direction of CURRENT, your
thumb points along FIELD!
Forces between wires
Magnetic field due to wire 1
where the wire 2 is,

µ0 I1
L I1 I2 B1 =
2! a
F Force on wire 2 due to this field,

µ0 LI1 I 2
F21 = L I 2 B1 =
2! a

a
Summary
• Magnetic fields exert forces on moving charges:
• The force is perpendicular to the field and the velocity.
• A current loop is a magnetic dipole moment.
• Uniform magnetic fields exert torques on dipole moments.
• Electric currents produce magnetic fields:
•To compute magnetic fields produced by currents, use Biot-
Savart’s law for each element of current, and then integrate.
• Straight currents produce circular magnetic field lines, with
amplitude B=µ0i/2πr (use right hand rule for direction).
• Circular currents produce a magnetic field at the center
(given by another right hand rule) equal to B=µ0iΦ/4πr
• Wires currying currents produce forces on each other:
parallel currents attract, antiparallel currents repel.

You might also like