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Griffiths Problems 05.47 PDF

1) The magnetic field of a spinning disk can be calculated by treating it as concentric current loops. 2) The magnetic field inside a spinning solid sphere can be calculated by integrating the field of concentric disks over the sphere's radius. 3) For a point inside the sphere, the field has contributions from two regions - the inner region between 0 and the point's radius, and the outer region between the point's radius and the sphere's radius. 4) The total field inside the sphere is the sum of these two contributions and agrees with the field calculated directly for a rotating sphere.

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

Griffiths Problems 05.47 PDF

1) The magnetic field of a spinning disk can be calculated by treating it as concentric current loops. 2) The magnetic field inside a spinning solid sphere can be calculated by integrating the field of concentric disks over the sphere's radius. 3) For a point inside the sphere, the field has contributions from two regions - the inner region between 0 and the point's radius, and the outer region between the point's radius and the sphere's radius. 4) The total field inside the sphere is the sum of these two contributions and agrees with the field calculated directly for a rotating sphere.

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Nishtha Kumari
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MAGNETIC FIELDS OF SPINNING DISK AND SPHERE

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Reference: Griffiths, David J. (2007) Introduction to Electrodynamics,
3rd Edition; Prentice Hall - Problem 5.47.
Another application of the magnetic field due to a circular current loop
of radius R and current I a distance z above the centre of the loop (as given
by Griffiths example 5.6):

µ0 IR2 1
B= (1)
2 [R2 + z 2 ]3/2
We start with a spinning disk with surface charge density σ. We can treat
this as a collection of concentric current loops, with the current at radius r
given by

dI (r) = σrωdr (2)

where ω is the angular velocity. The field of the spinning disk is then
ˆ R
µ0 σω r3
B (z) = 3/2
dr (3)
2 (r2 + z 2 )
0

µ0 σω 2z 2 + R2
 
= √ − 2z (4)
2 R2 + z 2
Now we can work out the field due to a spinning solid sphere of charge
density ρ as a collection of spinning disks. We fix our observation point
z, and place the origin at the centre of the sphere. A given disk within the
sphere has a radius given by R sin θ for a particular value of θ. The distance
of this disk from the observation point is z − R cos θ and the charge density
in the disk is ρRdθ. It might seem that the way to proceed is to replace
σ → ρRdθ R → R sin θ and z → z − R cos θ in the formula for the spinning
disk and then integrate over θ from 0 to π. That is, we try:

ˆ
 
π 2 2
µ0 ρRω 2 (z − R cos θ) + (R sin θ)
B (z) = q − 2 (z − R cos θ) dθ
2 0 2 2
(R sin θ) + (z − R cos θ)
(5)
1
MAGNETIC FIELDS OF SPINNING DISK AND SPHERE 2

Even after multiplying out the various squares and trying to simplify this
expression, plugging it into software gives a complex sum of elliptic func-
tions. It turns out that a better approach is to use an integral over the z
coordinate of the disks. Let ζ be the z coordinate of a given disk. Then
the distancepfrom the disk to the observation point is z − ζ, the radius of
the disk is R2 − ζ 2 and the charge density is ρdζ. Now the appropriate
substitutions
p into the formula for the disk’s magnetic field are z → z − ζ,
R → R − ζ 2 and σ → ρdζ, and the integral is over ζ between −R and
2
R:

ˆ
 
R 2
µ0 ρω 2 (z − ζ) + R2 − ζ 2
B (z) = q − 2 (z − ζ) dζ (6)
2 −R 2 2 2
R − ζ + (z − ζ)
ˆ " #
µ0 ρω R 2z 2 + R2 − 4zζ + ζ 2
= p − 2 (z − ζ) dζ (7)
2 −R R2 + z 2 − 2zζ
2 µ0 ρωR5
= (8)
15 z 3
Software was used for the integral, but the first term in the integrand can
be split into 3 (one for each term in the numerator) and either integrated
directly or by parts, so it’s not too hard even by hand. Note that we’ve
assumed that z > R. If we take 0 ≤ z ≤ R then we get contributions to
the field from two different regions: 0 ≤ ζ ≤ z and z ≤ ζ ≤ R. The field
B1 from the inner region can be obtained from 7 by setting R = z and
integrating from −z to z

ˆ z
" #
µ0 ρω 3z 2 − 4zζ + ζ 2
B1 = p − 2 (z − ζ) dζ (9)
2 −z 2z 2 − 2zζ
2
= µ0 ρωz 2 (10)
15
Each spherical shell of radius ζ in the outer region contributes a uniform
field of magnitude (as worked out in Griffiths’s example 5.11):

2
Bshell = µ0 σωζ (11)
3

ere σ is the surface charge density on the shell. A shell from our solid
sphere of charge has a charge density of σ = ρ dζ so the field due to the
outer region is
MAGNETIC FIELDS OF SPINNING DISK AND SPHERE 3

ˆ R
2
B2 = µ0 ρω ζ dζ (12)
3 z
1
µ0 ρω R2 − z 2

= (13)
3
The total field for z < R is then

Bz<R = B1 + B2 (14)
2 1
µ0 ρωz 2 + µ0 ρω R2 − z 2

= (15)
15 3
 2
z2

R
= µ0 ρω − (16)
3 5
This agrees with our earlier calculation of the field inside a rotating sphere
    
µ0 ωρ 2 3 2 6 2 2
B= R0 − r cos θr̂ + r − R0 sin θθ̂ (17)
3 5 5
To get the field along the z axis, we set θ = 0 and r = z, so we get the
same formula.

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