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Problem 5.3: Solution

- The circuit shows two identical springs supporting a 10cm horizontal wire with a mass of 20g. Without a magnetic field, the springs stretch 0.2cm each due to the weight. - When a uniform magnetic field is turned on, the springs stretch an additional 0.5cm each. Using the spring force equation and additional force calculations, the magnetic field intensity B is found to be 1.63 Tesla.

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Eric Kial
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
686 views1 page

Problem 5.3: Solution

- The circuit shows two identical springs supporting a 10cm horizontal wire with a mass of 20g. Without a magnetic field, the springs stretch 0.2cm each due to the weight. - When a uniform magnetic field is turned on, the springs stretch an additional 0.5cm each. Using the spring force equation and additional force calculations, the magnetic field intensity B is found to be 1.63 Tesla.

Uploaded by

Eric Kial
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Problem 5.3 The circuit shown in Fig. P5.

3 uses two identical springs to support a 10-cm-long horizontal wire with a mass of 20 g. In the absence of a magnetic eld, the weight of the wire causes the springs to stretch a distance of 0.2 cm each. When a uniform magnetic eld is turned on in the region containing the horizontal wire, the springs are observed to stretch an additional 0.5 cm each. What is the intensity of the magnetic ux density B? The force equation for a spring is F = kd , where k is the spring constant and d is the distance it has been stretched.

4W

12 V
+

Springs

10 cm
Figure P5.3: Conguration of Problem 5.3.

Solution: Springs are characterized by a spring constant k where F = kd is the force exerted on the spring and d is the amount the spring is stretched from its rest conguration. In this instance, each spring sees half the weight of the wire:
1 mg = kd , F=2

k=

mg 20 103 9.8 = = 49 (N/m). 2d 2 2 103

Therefore, when the springs are further stretched by an additional 0.5 cm, this amounts to an additional force of F = 49 N/m (5 103 m) = 245 mN per spring, or a total additional force of F = 0.49 N. This force is equal to the force exerted on the wire by the interaction of the magnetic eld and the current as described by Eq. (5.12): Fm = I B, where and B are at right angles. Moreover B is in the downward direction, and I = V /R = 12 V/4 = 3 A. Therefore, |Fm | = |I || ||B|, |B| = |Fm | 0.49 = = 1.63 (T). |I || | 3 0.1

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