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Current in an LC Circuit

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1 Current in an LC Circuit
Period: Frequency:

2 Question (Chap. 23) A capacitor C was charged and contains charge +Q0 and –Q0 on each of its plates, respectively. It is then connected to an inductor (coil) L. Assuming the ideal case (wires have no resistance) which is true? Q0 There will be no current in the circuit at any time because of the opposing emf in the inductor. The current in the circuit will maximize at time t when the capacitor will have charge Q(t)=0. The current in the circuit will maximize at time t when capacitor will have full charge Q(t)=Q0. The current will decay exponentially. Answer: B ; charge goes like cosine, current goes like sine

3 Question Two metal rings lie side-by-side on a table. Current in the left ring runs clockwise and is increasing with time. This induces a current in the right ring. This current runs Clockwise Counterclockwise when viewed from above (A), B field is increasing upwards through second loop … thumb downward

4 Faraday’s Law: Applications
Single home current: 100 A service Vwires=IRwires Transformer: emfHV IHV = emfhomeIhome Single home current in HV: <0.1 A Power loss in wires ~ I2

5 Faraday’s Law: Applications

6 Faraday’s Law: Applications
Induction microphone

7 Classical Theory of Electromagnetic Radiation
Chapter 24 Classical Theory of Electromagnetic Radiation

8 Maxwell’s Equations Gauss’s law for electricity
Gauss’s law for magnetism 𝐸 ∙𝑑 𝑙 =− 𝑑 𝑑𝑡 𝐵 ∙ 𝑛 𝑑𝐴 Complete Faraday’s law Ampere’s law (Incomplete Ampere-Maxwell law) Lets work with the last one…

9 Ampere’s Law Current pierces surface No current inside
Lets work with the last one…

10 Maxwell’s Approach Time varying magnetic field leads to curly electric field. Time varying electric field leads to curly magnetic field? I Current in wire I – causes change in E flux, should cause the same effect in curly B ‘equivalent’ current combine with current in Ampere’s law

11 The Ampere-Maxwell Law
Works! This law cannot be derived, but all experimental facts prove it, especially phenomena of radio and light-waves

12 Maxwell’s Equations Four equations (integral form) : Gauss’s law
Gauss’s law for magnetism Faraday’s law Ampere-Maxwell law Add Lorentz to complete the list of fundamental equations of electricity and magnetism Lorentz eq – defines the meaning of electric and magnetic field in terms of their effect on charge + Lorentz force

13 Fields Without Charges
Time varying magnetic field makes electric field Time varying electric field makes magnetic field Do we need any charges around to sustain the fields? Is it possible to create such a time varying field configuration which is consistent with Maxwell’s equation? Solution plan: Propose particular configuration Check if it is consistent with Maxwell’s eqs Show the way to produce such field Identify the effects such field will have on matter Analyze phenomena involving such fields

14 A Simple Configuration of Traveling Fields
Key idea: Fields travel in space at certain speed Disturbance moving in space – a wave? 1. Simplest case: a pulse (moving slab) very high and deep slab – fields only inside Is it consistent with Maxwell’s law?

15 A Pulse and Gauss’s Laws
Pulse is consistent with Gauss’s law very hign and deep slab – fields only insude Is it consistent with Maxwell’s law? Pulse is consistent with Gauss’s law for magnetism

16 A Pulse and Faraday’s Law
Area does not move Since pulse is ‘moving’, B depends on time and thus causes E emf E=Bv Direction is correct since B increases out of page so –dBdt points into page. RHR gives E in correct direction (up; along only part in Bfield of length h) . Is direction right?

17 A Pulse and Ampere-Maxwell Law
=0

18 A Pulse: Speed of Propagation
E=Bv E=cB Spectacular result: Maxwell predicts speed of light for electromagnetic pulse in mid-1800 – but no one at this time could guess the electromagnetic nature of light, though the speed of light was already known. He got speed of light theoretically from constants epsilon and mu which are easy to measure in experiment Based on Maxwell’s equations, pulse must propagate at speed of light

19 Question At this instant, the magnetic flux Fmag through the entire rectangle is: D B; B) Bx; C) Bwh; D) Bxh; E) Bvh

20 Question In a time Dt, what is DFmag?
c A) 0; B) BvDt; C) BhvDt; D) Bxh; E) B(x+vDt)h

21 Question emf = DFmag/Dt = ? B A) 0; B) Bvh; C) Bv; D) Bxh; E) B(x+v)h

22 Question What is 𝐸 ∙𝑑 𝑙 around the full rectangular path?
Eh; B) Ew+Eh; C) 2Ew+2Eh; D) Eh+2Ex+2EvDt; E)2EvDt

23 Question 𝐸 ∙𝑑 𝑙 =𝐸ℎ What is E?
𝐸 ∙𝑑 𝑙 =𝐸ℎ What is E? B A) Bvh; B) Bv; C) Bvh/(2h+2x); D) B; E) Bvh/x

24 Exercise 𝐹 𝑚𝑎𝑔 𝐹 𝑒𝑙 = 𝑣𝐵 𝐸 = 𝑣𝐵 𝑐𝐵 = 𝑣 𝑐
If the magnetic field in a particular pulse has a magnitude of 1x10-5 tesla (comparable to the Earth’s magnetic field), what is the magnitude of the associated electric field? Force on charge q moving with velocity v perpendicular to B: 𝐹 𝑚𝑎𝑔 𝐹 𝑒𝑙 = 𝑣𝐵 𝐸 = 𝑣𝐵 𝑐𝐵 = 𝑣 𝑐

25 Direction of Propagation
Direction of speed is given by vector product Convenient to remember direction is E x B

26 Electromagnetic Radiation
Last shown

27 Accelerated Charges Electromagnetic pulse can propagate in space
How can we initiate such a pulse? Short pulse of transverse electric field

28 Accelerated Charges Transverse pulse propagates at speed of light
Since E(t) there must be B Direction of v is given by: E B v No magnetic field out of the circle Ordinary (steady) magnetic field out of page inside – same as radiative. But this is does not need to be the case – acceleration matters – if it moves up and then slows down – different direction.

29 Accelerated Charges: 3D

30 Magnitude of the Transverse Electric Field
We can qualitatively predict the direction. What is the magnitude? Magnitude can be derived from Gauss’s law Field ~ -qa Derivation is in not difficult, but long and mostly geometry. Kink in the electric field Much slower than 1/r2 – makes it possible to affect matter that is very far from the accelerated charges – that is why we see very distant stars. 1. The direction of the field is opposite to qa 2. The electric field falls off at a rate 1/r

31 Exercise a An electron is briefly accelerated in the direction shown. Draw the electric and magnetic vectors of radiative field. E B 1. The direction of the field is opposite to qa 2. The direction of propagation is given by Electron so E same direction as aperp. Velocity in direction of r so B into page.

32 Exercise An electric field of 106 N/C acts on an electron for a short time. What is the magnitude of electric field observed 2 cm away? 2 cm E=106 N/C B Erad a 1. Acceleration a=F/m=qE/m= m/s2 2. The direction of the field is opposite to qa 3. The magnitude: E= N/C 4. The direction of propagation is given by Derivation is too complex for this course Kink in the electric field Much slower than 1/r2 – makes it possible to affect matter that is very far from the accelerated charges – that is why we see very distant stars. Quali What is the magnitude of the Coulomb field at the same location?

33 Question A proton is briefly accelerated as shown below. What is the direction of the radiative electric field that will be detected at location A? B A A D C + C

34 Question A narrow collimated pulse of radiation propagates in the -x direction. There is an electron at location A. What is the direction of the radiative electric field observed at location B? B A C B D e-

35 Stability of Atoms v Circular motion: Is there radiation emitted? a
Classical physics says “YES” orbiting particle must lose energy! speed decreases particle comes closer to center Classical model of atom: Electrons should fall on nucleus! Puzzle was solved by introducing QM Synchrotron ratiation To explain the facts - introduction of quantum mechanics: Electrons can move around certain orbits only and emit E/M radiation only when jumping from one orbit to another

36 Sinusoidal Electromagnetic Radiation
Acceleration: Sinusoidal E/M field

37 Sinusoidal E/M Radiation: Wavelength
Instead of period can use wavelength: Freeze picture in time: Example of sinusoidal E/M radiation: atoms radio stations E/M noise from AC wires

38 Electromagnetic Spectrum
Microwave: not because it is used in microwave, but because it has ~micron wavelength Visible – the whole spectrum from blue to red – the frequency barely changes twice!

39 Color Vision Three types of receptors (cones) in retina which incorporate three different organic molecules which are in resonance with red, green and blue light frequencies (RGB-vision): Response spectra for three types of receptors Max response wavelengths: S – 440 nm ( Hz) M – 540 nm ( Hz) L – 560 nm ( Hz) Microwave: not because it is used in microwave, but because it has ~micron wavelength Visible – the whole spectrum from blue to red – the frequency barely changes twice! Three types of rhodopsin receptors contain three different opsin molecules (red, green, blue) Cone absorption spectra: peaks at 440, 540, 560 nm (Short, Medium and Long – type cones, three types of opsin in rhodopsin) Refers to length of cone

40 E/M Radiation Transmitters
How can we produce electromagnetic radiation of a desired frequency? Need to create oscillating motion of electrons Radio frequency LC circuit: can produce oscillating motion of charges To increase effect: connect to antenna Visible light Heat up atoms, atomic vibration can reach visible frequency range Transitions of electrons between different quantized levels

41 Polarized E/M Radiation
AC voltage (~300 MHz) E/M radiation can be polarized along one axis… no light At every single time E is of course in just one direction, but it changes randomly and rapidly over time Light from the sun is not polarized! …and it can be unpolarized:

42 Polarized Light Making polarized light Turning polarization
Polaroid sunglasses and camera filters: Show trick with three polarizers – two crossed ones, add one at 45 degrees in the middle Sheet of special plastic whose long molecules are aligned with each other Sunglasses reflected light is highly polarized: can block it Considered: using polarized car lights and polarizers-windshields

43 Field of an Accelerated Charge


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