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Slide 1Fig 29-CO, p.895. Slide 2  The direction of the magnetic field B at any location is the direction in which a compass needle points at that location.

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Presentation on theme: "Slide 1Fig 29-CO, p.895. Slide 2  The direction of the magnetic field B at any location is the direction in which a compass needle points at that location."— Presentation transcript:

1 Slide 1Fig 29-CO, p.895

2 Slide 2  The direction of the magnetic field B at any location is the direction in which a compass needle points at that location.  the magnetic field lines outside the magnet point away from north poles and toward south poles.

3 Slide 3  We can define a magnetic field B at some point in space in terms of the magnetic force F B that the field exerts on a test object, for which we use a charged particle moving with a velocity v.  assuming that no electric (E) or gravitational (g) fields are present at the location of the test object.

4 Slide 4 The magnitude F B of the magnetic force exerted on the particle is proportional to the charge q and to the speed v of the particle The magnitude and direction of F B depend on the velocity of the particle V and on the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field B. When a charged particle moves parallel to the magnetic field vector (i.e., θ = 0), the magnetic force acting on the particle is zero. When the particle’s velocity vector makes any angle with the magnetic field, the magnetic force acts in a direction perpendicular to both v and B; F B is perpendicular to the plane formed by v and B

5 Slide 5Fig 29-3b, p.897 The magnetic force exerted on a positive charge is in the direction opposite the direction of the magnetic force exerted on a negative charge moving in the same direction. The magnitude of the magnetic force exerted on the moving particle is proportional to sin, where is the angle the particle’s velocity vector makes with the direction of B. We can summarize these observations by writing the magnetic force in the form

6 Slide 6

7 Slide 7Fig 29-6, p.901

8 Slide 8 An electron in a television picture tube moves toward the front of the tube with a speed of 8.0 x 10 6 m/s along the x axis. Surrounding the neck of the tube are coils of wire that create a magnetic field of magnitude 0.025 T, directed at an angle of 60° to the x axis and lying in the xy plane. Calculate the magnetic force on and acceleration of the electron.

9 Slide 9 3- An electron moving along the positive x axis perpendicular to a magnetic field experiences a magnetic deflection in the negative y direction. What is the direction of the magnetic field?

10 Slide 10 5- A proton moves in a direction perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field B at 1.0 x10 7 m/s and experiences an acceleration of 2.0x10 13 m/s 2 in the + x direction when its velocity is in the +z direction. Determine the magnitude and direction of the field.

11 Slide 11Fig 29-7, p.901 If a magnetic force is exerted on a single charged particle when the particle moves through a magnetic field, it should not surprise you that a current-carrying wire also experiences a force when placed in a magnetic field. the current is a collection of many charged particles in motion; hence, the resultant force exerted by the field on the wire is the vector sum of the individual forces exerted on all the charged particles making up the current. The force exerted on the particles is transmitted to the wire when the particles collide with the atoms making up the wire.

12 Slide 12Fig 29-7a, p.901

13 Slide 13Fig 29-8, p.901

14 Slide 14 15- A wire having a mass per unit length of 0.500 g/cm carries a 2.00-A current horizontally to the south. What are the direction and magnitude of the minimum magnetic field needed to lift this wire vertically upward?

15 Slide 15 14- A conductor suspended by two flexible wires as shown in Figure P29.16 has a mass per unit length of 0.040 0 kg/m. What current must exist in the conductor for the tension in the supporting wires to be zero when the Magnetic field is 3.6T into the page ? what is The requid direction for the current?

16 Slide 16 # The magnetic force acting on a charged particle moving in a magnetic field is perpendicular to the velocity of the particle and consequently the work done on the particle by the magnetic force is zero. (W= F.S= Fs cos θ) # Because F B always points toward the center of the circle, it changes only the direction of v and not its magnitude. # the rotation is counterclockwise for a positive charge. If q were negative, the rotation would be clockwise.

17 Slide 17 The angular speed of the particle The period of the motion T (the time that the particle takes to complete one revolution) is equal to the circumference of the circle divided by the linear speed of the particle:

18 Slide 18 A proton is moving in a circular orbit of radius 14 cm in a uniform 0.35-T magnetic field perpendicular to the velocity of the proton. Find the linear speed of the proton.

19 Slide 19 1- Velocity Selector:

20 Slide 20 Only those particles having speed v pass un-deflected through the mutually perpendicular electric and magnetic fields. The magnetic force exerted on particles moving at speeds greater than this is stronger than the electric force, and the particles are deflected upward. Those moving at speeds less than this are deflected downward.

21 Slide 21

22 Slide 22

23 Slide 23

24 Slide 24

25 Slide 25Fig 29-20, p.909

26 Slide 26Fig 29-21, p.910

27 Slide 27Fig 29-22, p.910

28 Slide 28Fig 29-23, p.911

29 Slide 29Fig 29-23a, p.911

30 Slide 30Fig 29-23b, p.911

31 Slide 31Fig 29-24, p.911

32 Slide 32Fig 29-25a, p.912

33 Slide 33Fig 29-25b, p.912

34 Slide 34Fig 29-26, p.912

35 Slide 35Fig 29-27a, p.913

36 Slide 36Fig 29-27b, p.913

37 Slide 37Fig 29-28, p.914

38 Slide 38Fig 29-29, p.915

39 Slide 39Fig 29-29a, p.915

40 Slide 40Fig 29-29b, p.915

41 Slide 41Fig Q29-9, p.917

42 Slide 42Fig P29-17, p.918

43 Slide 43Fig P29-1, p.918

44 Slide 44Fig P29-1a, p.918

45 Slide 45Fig P29-1b, p.918

46 Slide 46Fig P29-1c, p.918

47 Slide 47Fig P29-1d, p.918

48 Slide 48Fig P29-14, p.919

49 Slide 49Fig P29-15, p.919

50 Slide 50Fig P29-17, p.919

51 Slide 51Fig P29-18, p.920

52 Slide 52Fig P29-23, p.920

53 Slide 53Fig P29-48, p.922

54 Slide 54Fig P29-53, p.922

55 Slide 55Fig P29-55, p.922

56 Slide 56Fig P29-59, p.923

57 Slide 57Fig P29-61, p.923

58 Slide 58Fig P29-63, p.923

59 Slide 59Fig P29-64, p.923

60 Slide 60Fig P29-66, p.924

61 Slide 61Fig P29-69, p.924

62 Slide 62Table P29-70, p.924

63 Slide 63Fig P29-71, p.924

64 Slide 64Fig P29-72, p.925


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