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02. Analysis Tools

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    Long, Parallel Wires

    Three long, parallel wires are located as shown. Each grid square has a width a. Find the net magnetic force per unit length on the rightmost wire.

    pic 1.png

    The magnetic force on a current-carrying wire is given by the relation,

    \[ \vec{F} = \int i \left ( \mathrm{d} \vec{l} \right ) \times \vec{B} \]

    However, for this scenario the relationship simplifies. First, the magnetic field from the two source wires is constant along the entire length of the wire of interest. Second, since the wire of interest is straight, \(\mathrm{d} \vec{l}\) is also constant. Therefore, instead of an integral you have:

    pic 3.png

    where L is the total length of the wire of interest.

    To solve this problem, first find the net magnetic field at the location of the wire of interest, and then perform the cross-product. The magnetic field will be the vector sum of the magnetic field for the leftmost wire (BL) and the magnetic field from the central wire (BC).

    pic 4.png pic 5.png

    Adding these two contributions together yields

    pic 6.png

    So the magnetic force on the rightmost wire is:

    pic 7.png

    and the force per unit length is

    pic 8.png

    The force is to the right, and slightly downward. Notice that wires carrying currents in opposite directions tend to repel each other, while wires carrying currents in the same direction tend to attract each other.

    Curved Wires

    The bent wire below carries current i, consists of two straight segments of length 3l and a half-circle of radius L, and lies in a region of uniform magnetic field, B, in the +x-direction. Find the total force acting on the wire.

    pic 9.png

    To find the total magnetic force on this bent wire, treat the wire as three separate wires. The force on the two straight sections is zero, because the current in these sections is parallel to the field, resulting in no magnetic force. Therefore, the force on the entire wire is equal to the force on the curved section, which will require setting up and evaluating an integral.

    The differential element is located at an angle q, measured clockwise from the -y-axis. At this location, dl.pngis directed in the +x-direction and +y-direction. This results in:

    pic 10.png

    Using this differential element, the force on the pic 12.png

    curved secton of wire is given by:

    pic 11.png

    The magnetic force will cause the curved end of the wire to sink into the plane of the page.


    This page titled 02. Analysis Tools is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Paul D'Alessandris via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.