Physics 2102
Physics 2102
Jonathan Dowling
Physics 2102
Lecture 15
Biot-Savart Law
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
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!!
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.