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Ncert Summary Class 12th Physics

1. Electric and magnetic forces determine the properties of atoms, molecules, and matter. Charges can be positive or negative, and like charges repel while unlike charges attract. 2. The electric force between two charges is proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them, as described by Coulomb's law. 3. Electric charge has the properties of quantization, additivity, and conservation. It is the electric field model that is used to describe electric phenomena and interactions between charges.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
274 views29 pages

Ncert Summary Class 12th Physics

1. Electric and magnetic forces determine the properties of atoms, molecules, and matter. Charges can be positive or negative, and like charges repel while unlike charges attract. 2. The electric force between two charges is proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them, as described by Coulomb's law. 3. Electric charge has the properties of quantization, additivity, and conservation. It is the electric field model that is used to describe electric phenomena and interactions between charges.

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meghraj.social
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Physics

SUMMARY

1. Electric and magnetic forces determine the properties of atoms,


molecules and bulk matter.
2. From simple experiments on frictional electricity, one can infer that
there are two types of charges in nature; and that like charges repel
and unlike charges attract. By convention, the charge on a glass rod
rubbed with silk is positive; that on a plastic rod rubbed with fur is
then negative.
3. Conductors allow movement of electric charge through them, insulators
do not. In metals, the mobile charges are electrons; in electrolytes
both positive and negative ions are mobile.
4. Electric charge has three basic properties: quantisation, additivity
and conservation.
Quantisation of electric charge means that total charge (q) of a body
is always an integral multiple of a basic quantum of charge (e) i.e.,
q = n e, where n = 0, ±1, ±2, ±3, .... Proton and electron have charges
+e, –e, respectively. For macroscopic charges for which n is a very large
number, quantisation of charge can be ignored.
Additivity of electric charges means that the total charge of a system
is the algebraic sum (i.e., the sum taking into account proper signs)
of all individual charges in the system.
Conservation of electric charges means that the total charge of an
isolated system remains unchanged with time. This means that when
bodies are charged through friction, there is a transfer of electric charge
from one body to another, but no creation or destruction of charge.
5. Coulomb’s Law: The mutual electrostatic force between two point
charges q1 and q2 is proportional to the product q1q2 and inversely
proportional to the square of the distance r 21 separating them.
Mathematically,
k (q1q2 )
F21 = force on q2 due to q1 = 2
rˆ21
r21
1
where r̂21 is a unit vector in the direction from q1 to q2 and k =
4 πε 0
is the constant of proportionality.
In SI units, the unit of charge is coulomb. The experimental value of
the constant ε0 is
ε0 = 8.854 × 10–12 C2 N–1 m–2
The approximate value of k is
k = 9 × 109 N m2 C–2
6. The ratio of electric force and gravitational force between a proton
and an electron is

k e2
≅ 2.4 × 1039
G m em p
7. Superposition Principle: The principle is based on the property that the
forces with which two charges attract or repel each other are not
affected by the presence of a third (or more) additional charge(s). For
an assembly of charges q1, q2, q3, ..., the force on any charge, say q1, is
42

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Electric Charges
and Fields

the vector sum of the force on q1 due to q2, the force on q1 due to q3,
and so on. For each pair, the force is given by the Coulomb’s law for
two charges stated earlier.
8. The electric field E at a point due to a charge configuration is the
force on a small positive test charge q placed at the point divided by
the magnitude of the charge. Electric field due to a point charge q has
a magnitude |q|/4πε0r 2; it is radially outwards from q, if q is positive,
and radially inwards if q is negative. Like Coulomb force, electric field
also satisfies superposition principle.
9. An electric field line is a curve drawn in such a way that the tangent
at each point on the curve gives the direction of electric field at that
point. The relative closeness of field lines indicates the relative strength
of electric field at different points; they crowd near each other in regions
of strong electric field and are far apart where the electric field is
weak. In regions of constant electric field, the field lines are uniformly
spaced parallel straight lines.
10. Some of the important properties of field lines are: (i) Field lines are
continuous curves without any breaks. (ii) Two field lines cannot cross
each other. (iii) Electrostatic field lines start at positive charges and
end at negative charges —they cannot form closed loops.
11. An electric dipole is a pair of equal and opposite charges q and –q
separated by some distance 2a. Its dipole moment vector p has
magnitude 2qa and is in the direction of the dipole axis from –q to q.
12. Field of an electric dipole in its equatorial plane (i.e., the plane
perpendicular to its axis and passing through its centre) at a distance
r from the centre:

−p 1
E=
4 πε o (a + r 2 )3 / 2
2

−p
≅ , for r >> a
4 πε o r 3
Dipole electric field on the axis at a distance r from the centre:

2 pr
E =
4 πε 0 (r 2 − a 2 )2

2p
≅ for r >> a
4 πε 0r 3
The 1/r 3 dependence of dipole electric fields should be noted in contrast
to the 1/r 2 dependence of electric field due to a point charge.
13. In a uniform electric field E, a dipole experiences a torque τ given by
τ =p×E
but experiences no net force.
14. The flux ∆φ of electric field E through a small area element ∆S is
given by
∆φ = E.∆S
The vector area element ∆S is
∆S = ∆S n̂

where ∆S is the magnitude of the area element and n̂ is normal to the


area element, which can be considered planar for sufficiently small ∆S. 43

2019-20
Physics

For an area element of a closed surface, n̂ is taken to be the direction


of outward normal, by convention.
15. Gauss’s law: The flux of electric field through any closed surface S is
1/ε0 times the total charge enclosed by S. The law is especially useful
in determining electric field E, when the source distribution has simple
symmetry:
(i) Thin infinitely long straight wire of uniform linear charge density λ
λ
E= ˆ
n
2 πε 0 r
where r is the perpendicular distance of the point from the wire and
n̂ is the radial unit vector in the plane normal to the wire passing
through the point.
(ii) Infinite thin plane sheet of uniform surface charge density σ
σ
E= ˆ
n
2 ε0

where n̂ is a unit vector normal to the plane, outward on either side.


(iii) Thin spherical shell of uniform surface charge density σ
q
E= rˆ (r ≥ R )
4 πε 0 r 2
E=0 (r < R )
where r is the distance of the point from the centre of the shell and R
the radius of the shell. q is the total charge of the shell: q = 4πR2σ.
The electric field outside the shell is as though the total charge is
concentrated at the centre. The same result is true for a solid sphere
of uniform volume charge density. The field is zero at all points inside
the shell.

Physical quantity Symbol Dimensions Unit Remarks

Vector area element ∆S [L2] m2 ∆S = ∆S n̂

Electric field E [MLT–3A–1] V m–1

Electric flux φ [ML3 T–3A–1] Vm ∆φ = E.∆S

Dipole moment p [LTA] Cm Vector directed


from negative to
positive charge

Charge density:

linear λ [L–1 TA] C m–1 Charge/length

surface σ [L–2 TA] C m–2 Charge/area

volume ρ [L–3 TA] C m–3 Charge/volume


44

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Electric Charges
and Fields

POINTS TO PONDER

1. You might wonder why the protons, all carrying positive charges, are
compactly residing inside the nucleus. Why do they not fly away? You
will learn that there is a third kind of a fundamental force, called the
strong force which holds them together. The range of distance where
this force is effective is, however, very small ~10-14 m. This is precisely
the size of the nucleus. Also the electrons are not allowed to sit on
top of the protons, i.e. inside the nucleus, due to the laws of quantum
mechanics. This gives the atoms their structure as they exist in nature.
2. Coulomb force and gravitational force follow the same inverse-square
law. But gravitational force has only one sign (always attractive), while
Coulomb force can be of both signs (attractive and repulsive), allowing
possibility of cancellation of electric forces. This is how gravity, despite
being a much weaker force, can be a dominating and more pervasive
force in nature.
3. The constant of proportionality k in Coulomb’s law is a matter of
choice if the unit of charge is to be defined using Coulomb’s law. In SI
units, however, what is defined is the unit of current (A) via its magnetic
effect (Ampere’s law) and the unit of charge (coulomb) is simply defined
by (1C = 1 A s). In this case, the value of k is no longer arbitrary; it is
approximately 9 × 109 N m2 C–2.
4. The rather large value of k, i.e., the large size of the unit of charge
(1C) from the point of view of electric effects arises because (as
mentioned in point 3 already) the unit of charge is defined in terms of
magnetic forces (forces on current–carrying wires) which are generally
much weaker than the electric forces. Thus while 1 ampere is a unit
of reasonable size for magnetic effects, 1 C = 1 A s, is too big a unit for
electric effects.
5. The additive property of charge is not an ‘obvious’ property. It is related
to the fact that electric charge has no direction associated with it;
charge is a scalar.
6. Charge is not only a scalar (or invariant) under rotation; it is also
invariant for frames of reference in relative motion. This is not always
true for every scalar. For example, kinetic energy is a scalar under
rotation, but is not invariant for frames of reference in relative
motion.
7. Conservation of total charge of an isolated system is a property
independent of the scalar nature of charge noted in point 6.
Conservation refers to invariance in time in a given frame of reference.
A quantity may be scalar but not conserved (like kinetic energy in an
inelastic collision). On the other hand, one can have conserved vector
quantity (e.g., angular momentum of an isolated system).
8. Quantisation of electric charge is a basic (unexplained) law of nature;
interestingly, there is no analogous law on quantisation of mass.
9. Superposition principle should not be regarded as ‘obvious’, or equated
with the law of addition of vectors. It says two things: force on one
charge due to another charge is unaffected by the presence of other
charges, and there are no additional three-body, four-body, etc., forces
which arise only when there are more than two charges.
10. The electric field due to a discrete charge configuration is not defined
at the locations of the discrete charges. For continuous volume charge
distribution, it is defined at any point in the distribution. For a surface
charge distribution, electric field is discontinuous across the surface. 45

2019-20
Physics
11. The electric field due to a charge configuration with total charge zero
is not zero; but for distances large compared to the size of
the configuration, its field falls off faster than 1/r 2, typical of field
due to a single charge. An electric dipole is the simplest example of
this fact.

EXERCISES
1.1 What is the force between two small charged spheres having
charges of 2 × 10–7C and 3 × 10–7C placed 30 cm apart in air?
1.2 The electrostatic force on a small sphere of charge 0.4 µC due to
another small sphere of charge – 0.8 µC in air is 0.2 N. (a) What is
the distance between the two spheres? (b) What is the force on the
second sphere due to the first?
1.3 Check that the ratio ke2/G memp is dimensionless. Look up a Table
of Physical Constants and determine the value of this ratio. What
does the ratio signify?
1.4 (a) Explain the meaning of the statement ‘electric charge of a body
is quantised’.
(b) Why can one ignore quantisation of electric charge when dealing
with macroscopic i.e., large scale charges?
1.5 When a glass rod is rubbed with a silk cloth, charges appear on
both. A similar phenomenon is observed with many other pairs of
bodies. Explain how this observation is consistent with the law of
conservation of charge.
1.6 Four point charges qA = 2 µC, qB = –5 µC, qC = 2 µC, and qD = –5 µC are
located at the corners of a square ABCD of side 10 cm. What is the
force on a charge of 1 µC placed at the centre of the square?
1.7 (a) An electrostatic field line is a continuous curve. That is, a field
line cannot have sudden breaks. Why not?
(b) Explain why two field lines never cross each other at any point?
1.8 Two point charges qA = 3 µC and qB = –3 µC are located 20 cm apart
in vacuum.
(a) What is the electric field at the midpoint O of the line AB joining
the two charges?
(b) If a negative test charge of magnitude 1.5 × 10–9 C is placed at
this point, what is the force experienced by the test charge?
1.9 A system has two charges qA = 2.5 × 10–7 C and qB = –2.5 × 10–7 C
located at points A: (0, 0, –15 cm) and B: (0,0, +15 cm), respectively.
What are the total charge and electric dipole moment of the system?
1.10 An electric dipole with dipole moment 4 × 10–9 C m is aligned at 30°
with the direction of a uniform electric field of magnitude 5 × 104 NC–1.
Calculate the magnitude of the torque acting on the dipole.
1.11 A polythene piece rubbed with wool is found to have a negative
charge of 3 × 10–7 C.
(a) Estimate the number of electrons transferred (from which to
which?)
(b) Is there a transfer of mass from wool to polythene?
1.12 (a) Two insulated charged copper spheres A and B have their centres
46 separated by a distance of 50 cm. What is the mutual force of

2019-20
Electrostatic Potential
and Capacitance

charge on each capacitor is then Q ′ = CV ′ . By charge


conservation, Q′ = Q/2. This implies V′ = V/2. The total energy
1 1
of the system is = 2 × Q ' V ' = QV = 2.25 × 10 −6 J
2 4
Thus in going from (a) to (b), though no charge is lost; the final
energy is only half the initial energy. Where has the remaining

EXAMPLE 2.10
energy gone?
There is a transient period before the system settles to the
situation (b). During this period, a transient current flows from
the first capacitor to the second. Energy is lost during this time
in the form of heat and electromagnetic radiation.

SUMMARY

1. Electrostatic force is a conservative force. Work done by an external


force (equal and opposite to the electrostatic force) in bringing a charge
q from a point R to a point P is VP – VR, which is the difference in
potential energy of charge q between the final and initial points.
2. Potential at a point is the work done per unit charge (by an external
agency) in bringing a charge from infinity to that point. Potential at a
point is arbitrary to within an additive constant, since it is the potential
difference between two points which is physically significant. If potential
at infinity is chosen to be zero; potential at a point with position vector
r due to a point charge Q placed at the origin is given is given by
1 Q
V (r) =
4 πε o r
3. The electrostatic potential at a point with position vector r due to a
point dipole of dipole moment p placed at the origin is
1 p.rˆ
V (r) =
4 πε o r 2
The result is true also for a dipole (with charges –q and q separated by
2a) for r >> a.

4. For a charge configuration q 1, q2 , ..., q n with position vectors r 1,


r2, ... rn, the potential at a point P is given by the superposition principle

1 q1 q 2 q
V = ( + + ... + n )
4 πε 0 r1P r2P rnP
where r1P is the distance between q1 and P, as and so on.
5. An equipotential surface is a surface over which potential has a constant
value. For a point charge, concentric spheres centred at a location of the
charge are equipotential surfaces. The electric field E at a point is
perpendicular to the equipotential surface through the point. E is in the
direction of the steepest decrease of potential.

83

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Physics
6. Potential energy stored in a system of charges is the work done (by an
external agency) in assembling the charges at their locations. Potential
energy of two charges q1, q2 at r1, r2 is given by

1 q1 q2
U =
4 πε 0 r12
where r12 is distance between q1 and q2.

7. The potential energy of a charge q in an external potential V(r) is qV(r).


The potential energy of a dipole moment p in a uniform electric field E is
–p.E.

8. Electrostatics field E is zero in the interior of a conductor; just outside


the surface of a charged conductor, E is normal to the surface given by
σ
E= ˆ where n̂ is the unit vector along the outward normal to the
n
ε0
surface and σ is the surface charge density. Charges in a conductor can
reside only at its surface. Potential is constant within and on the surface
of a conductor. In a cavity within a conductor (with no charges), the
electric field is zero.

9. A capacitor is a system of two conductors separated by an insulator. Its


capacitance is defined by C = Q/V, where Q and –Q are the charges on the
two conductors and V is the potential difference between them. C is
determined purely geometrically, by the shapes, sizes and relative
positions of the two conductors. The unit of capacitance is farad:,
1 F = 1 C V –1. For a parallel plate capacitor (with vacuum between the
plates),
A
C= ε0
d
where A is the area of each plate and d the separation between them.

10. If the medium between the plates of a capacitor is filled with an insulating
substance (dielectric), the electric field due to the charged plates induces
a net dipole moment in the dielectric. This effect, called polarisation,
gives rise to a field in the opposite direction. The net electric field inside
the dielectric and hence the potential difference between the plates is
thus reduced. Consequently, the capacitance C increases from its value
C0 when there is no medium (vacuum),

C = KC0

where K is the dielectric constant of the insulating substance.

11. For capacitors in the series combination, the total capacitance C is given by

1 1 1 1
= + + + ...
C C1 C2 C 3
In the parallel combination, the total capacitance C is:
C = C1 + C2 + C3 + ...

84

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Electrostatic Potential
and Capacitance

where C1, C2, C3... are individual capacitances.

12. The energy U stored in a capacitor of capacitance C, with charge Q and


voltage V is

1 1 1 Q2
U = QV = CV 2 =
2 2 2 C
The electric energy density (energy per unit volume) in a region with
electric field is (1/2)ε0E2.

Physical quantity Symbol Dimensions Unit Remark

Potential or V [M1 L2 T–3 A–1] V Potential difference is


physically significant
Capacitance C [M–1 L–2 T–4 A2] F
Polarisation P [L–2 AT] C m-2 Dipole moment per unit
volume
Dielectric constant K [Dimensionless]

POINTS TO PONDER

1. Electrostatics deals with forces between charges at rest. But if there is a


force on a charge, how can it be at rest? Thus, when we are talking of
electrostatic force between charges, it should be understood that each
charge is being kept at rest by some unspecified force that opposes the
net Coulomb force on the charge.
2. A capacitor is so configured that it confines the electric field lines within
a small region of space. Thus, even though field may have considerable
strength, the potential difference between the two conductors of a
capacitor is small.
3. Electric field is discontinuous across the surface of a spherical charged
σ
shell. It is zero inside and ε0 n̂ outside. Electric potential is, however
continuous across the surface, equal to q/4πε0R at the surface.
4. The torque p × E on a dipole causes it to oscillate about E. Only if there
is a dissipative mechanism, the oscillations are damped and the dipole
eventually aligns with E.
5. Potential due to a charge q at its own location is not defined – it is
infinite.
6. In the expression qV (r) for potential energy of a charge q, V (r) is the
potential due to external charges and not the potential due to q. As seen
in point 5, this expression will be ill-defined if V (r) includes potential
due to a charge q itself. 85

2019-20
Physics
7. A cavity inside a conductor is shielded from outside electrical influences.
It is worth noting that electrostatic shielding does not work the other
way round; that is, if you put charges inside the cavity, the exterior of
the conductor is not shielded from the fields by the inside charges.

EXERCISES

2.1 Two charges 5 × 10–8 C and –3 × 10–8 C are located 16 cm apart. At


what point(s) on the line joining the two charges is the electric
potential zero? Take the potential at infinity to be zero.
2.2 A regular hexagon of side 10 cm has a charge 5 µC at each of its
vertices. Calculate the potential at the centre of the hexagon.
2.3 Two charges 2 µC and –2 µC are placed at points A and B 6 cm
apart.
(a) Identify an equipotential surface of the system.
(b) What is the direction of the electric field at every point on this
surface?
2.4 A spherical conductor of radius 12 cm has a charge of 1.6 × 10–7C
distributed uniformly on its surface. What is the electric field
(a) inside the sphere
(b) just outside the sphere
(c) at a point 18 cm from the centre of the sphere?
2.5 A parallel plate capacitor with air between the plates has a
capacitance of 8 pF (1pF = 10–12 F). What will be the capacitance if
the distance between the plates is reduced by half, and the space
between them is filled with a substance of dielectric constant 6?
2.6 Three capacitors each of capacitance 9 pF are connected in series.
(a) What is the total capacitance of the combination?
(b) What is the potential difference across each capacitor if the
combination is connected to a 120 V supply?
2.7 Three capacitors of capacitances 2 pF, 3 pF and 4 pF are connected
in parallel.
(a) What is the total capacitance of the combination?
(b) Determine the charge on each capacitor if the combination is
connected to a 100 V supply.
2.8 In a parallel plate capacitor with air between the plates, each plate
has an area of 6 × 10–3 m2 and the distance between the plates is 3 mm.
Calculate the capacitance of the capacitor. If this capacitor is
connected to a 100 V supply, what is the charge on each plate of the
capacitor?
86

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Physics
Substituting for R1, we have a
2V R ×R
V1 = × 0
 R ×R  R 0 + 2R
2  0  + R0
 R 0 + 2R 
EXAMPLE 3.10

2VR
V1 =
2R + R0 + 2R

or V1 = 2VR
.
R0 + 4R

SUMMARY

1. Current through a given area of a conductor is the net charge passing


per unit time through the area.
2. To maintain a steady current, we must have a closed circuit in which
an external agency moves electric charge from lower to higher potential
energy. The work done per unit charge by the source in taking the
charge from lower to higher potential energy (i.e., from one terminal
of the source to the other) is called the electromotive force, or emf, of
the source. Note that the emf is not a force; it is the voltage difference
between the two terminals of a source in open circuit.
3. Ohm’s law: The electric current I flowing through a substance is
proportional to the voltage V across its ends, i.e., V ∝ I or V = RI,
where R is called the resistance of the substance. The unit of resistance
is ohm: 1Ω = 1 V A–1.
4. The resistance R of a conductor depends on its length l and
cross-sectional area A through the relation,
ρl
R=
A
where ρ, called resistivity is a property of the material and depends on
temperature and pressure.
5. Electrical resistivity of substances varies over a very wide range. Metals
have low resistivity, in the range of 10–8 Ω m to 10–6 Ω m. Insulators
like glass and rubber have 1022 to 1024 times greater resistivity.
Semiconductors like Si and Ge lie roughly in the middle range of
resistivity on a logarithmic scale.
6. In most substances, the carriers of current are electrons; in some
cases, for example, ionic crystals and electrolytic liquids, positive and
negative ions carry the electric current.
7. Current density j gives the amount of charge flowing per second per
unit area normal to the flow,
j = nq vd
where n is the number density (number per unit volume) of charge
carriers each of charge q, and vd is the drift velocity of the charge
carriers. For electrons q = – e. If j is normal to a cross-sectional area
A and is constant over the area, the magnitude of the current I through
the area is nevd A.
124

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Current
Electricity

8. Using E = V/l, I = nevd A, and Ohm’s law, one obtains


eE ne 2
=ρ vd
m m
The proportionality between the force eE on the electrons in a metal
due to the external field E and the drift velocity vd (not acceleration)
can be understood, if we assume that the electrons suffer collisions
with ions in the metal, which deflect them randomly. If such collisions
occur on an average at a time interval τ,
vd = aτ = eEτ/m
where a is the acceleration of the electron. This gives
m
ρ=
ne 2τ
9. In the temperature range in which resistivity increases linearly with
temperature, the temperature coefficient of resistivity α is defined as
the fractional increase in resistivity per unit increase in temperature.
10. Ohm’s law is obeyed by many substances, but it is not a fundamental
law of nature. It fails if
(a) V depends on I non-linearly.
(b) the relation between V and I depends on the sign of V for the same
absolute value of V.
(c) The relation between V and I is non-unique.
An example of (a) is when ρ increases with I (even if temperature is
kept fixed). A rectifier combines features (a) and (b). GaAs shows the
feature (c).
11. When a source of emf ε is connected to an external resistance R, the
voltage Vext across R is given by
ε
Vext = IR = R
R +r
where r is the internal resistance of the source.
12. (a) Total resistance R of n resistors connected in series is given by
R = R1 + R2 +..... + Rn
(b) Total resistance R of n resistors connected in parallel is given by
1 1 1 1
= + + ...... +
R R1 R 2 Rn
13. Kirchhoff’s Rules –
(a) Junction Rule: At any junction of circuit elements, the sum of
currents entering the junction must equal the sum of currents
leaving it.
(b) Loop Rule: The algebraic sum of changes in potential around any
closed loop must be zero.
14. The Wheatstone bridge is an arrangement of four resistances – R1, R2,
R3, R4 as shown in the text. The null-point condition is given by
R1 R3
=
R2 R4
using which the value of one resistance can be determined, knowing
the other three resistances.
15. The potentiometer is a device to compare potential differences. Since
the method involves a condition of no current flow, the device can be
used to measure potential difference; internal resistance of a cell and
compare emf’s of two sources. 125

2019-20
Physics
Physical Quantity Symbol Dimensions Unit Remark

Electric current I [A] A SI base unit


Charge Q, q [T A] C
2 –3 –1
Voltage, Electric V [M L T A ] V Work/charge
potential difference
Electromotive force ε [M L T A ]
2 –3 –1
V Work/charge

2 –3 –2
Resistance R [M L T A ] R = V/I
Resistivity ρ [M L T A ]
3 –3 –2
Ωm R = ρl/A
Electrical σ [M
–1 –3
L T A]
3 2
S σ = 1/ρ
conductivity
–3 –1 –1 Electric force
Electric field E [M L T A ] Vm
charge
eE τ
Drift speed vd [L T –1] m s–1 vd =
m
Relaxation time τ [T] s
–2 –2
Current density j [L A] Am current/area

Mobility µ [M L T A ]
3 –4 –1 2
m V s
–1 –1
vd / E

POINTS TO PONDER

1. Current is a scalar although we represent current with an arrow.


Currents do not obey the law of vector addition. That current is a
scalar also follows from it’s definition. The current I through an area
of cross-section is given by the scalar product of two vectors:
I = j . ∆S
where j and ∆S are vectors.
2. Refer to V-I curves of a resistor and a diode as drawn in the text. A
resistor obeys Ohm’s law while a diode does not. The assertion that
V = IR is a statement of Ohm’s law is not true. This equation defines
resistance and it may be applied to all conducting devices whether
they obey Ohm’s law or not. The Ohm’s law asserts that the plot of I
versus V is linear i.e., R is independent of V.
Equation E = ρ j leads to another statement of Ohm’s law, i.e., a
conducting material obeys Ohm’s law when the resistivity of the
material does not depend on the magnitude and direction of applied
electric field.
3. Homogeneous conductors like silver or semiconductors like pure
germanium or germanium containing impurities obey Ohm’s law
within some range of electric field values. If the field becomes too
strong, there are departures from Ohm’s law in all cases.
4. Motion of conduction electrons in electric field E is the sum of (i)
126 motion due to random collisions and (ii) that due to E. The motion

2019-20
Current
Electricity

due to random collisions averages to zero and does not contribute to


vd (Chapter 11, Textbook of Class XI). vd , thus is only due to applied
electric field on the electron.
5. The relation j = ρ v should be applied to each type of charge carriers
separately. In a conducting wire, the total current and charge density
arises from both positive and negative charges:
j = ρ+ v+ + ρ– v–
ρ = ρ+ + ρ–
Now in a neutral wire carrying electric current,
ρ + = – ρ–
Further, v+ ~ 0 which gives
ρ=0
j = ρ– v
Thus, the relation j = ρ v does not apply to the total current charge
density.
6. Kirchhoff’s junction rule is based on conservation of charge and the
outgoing currents add up and are equal to incoming current at a
junction. Bending or reorienting the wire does not change the validity
of Kirchhoff’s junction rule.

EXERCISES
3.1 The storage battery of a car has an emf of 12 V. If the internal
resistance of the battery is 0.4 Ω, what is the maximum current
that can be drawn from the battery?
3.2 A battery of emf 10 V and internal resistance 3 Ω is connected to a
resistor. If the current in the circuit is 0.5 A, what is the resistance
of the resistor? What is the terminal voltage of the battery when the
circuit is closed?
3.3 (a) Three resistors 1 Ω, 2 Ω, and 3 Ω are combined in series. What
is the total resistance of the combination?
(b) If the combination is connected to a battery of emf 12 V and
negligible internal resistance, obtain the potential drop across
each resistor.
3.4 (a) Three resistors 2 Ω, 4 Ω and 5 Ω are combined in parallel. What
is the total resistance of the combination?
(b) If the combination is connected to a battery of emf 20 V and
negligible internal resistance, determine the current through
each resistor, and the total current drawn from the battery.
3.5 At room temperature (27.0 °C) the resistance of a heating element
is 100 Ω. What is the temperature of the element if the resistance is
found to be 117 Ω, given that the temperature coefficient of the
material of the resistor is 1.70 × 10–4 °C–1.
3.6 A negligibly small current is passed through a wire of length 15 m
and uniform cross-section 6.0 × 10 –7 m2 , and its resistance is
measured to be 5.0 Ω. What is the resistivity of the material at the
temperature of the experiment?
3.7 A silver wire has a resistance of 2.1 Ω at 27.5 °C, and a resistance
of 2.7 Ω at 100 °C. Determine the temperature coefficient of
resistivity of silver.
3.8 A heating element using nichrome connected to a 230 V supply
draws an initial current of 3.2 A which settles after a few seconds to 127

2019-20
Physics

FIGURE 4.27

Solution
(a) Total resistance in the circuit is,
RG + 3 = 63 Ω . Hence, I = 3/63 = 0.048 A.
(b) Resistance of the galvanometer converted to an ammeter is,
RG rs 60 Ω × 0.02Ω
=
(60 + 0.02)Ω ; 0.02Ω

EXAMPLE 4.13
RG + rs
Total resistance in the circuit is,
0.02 Ω + 3 Ω = 3.02 Ω . Hence, I = 3/3.02 = 0.99 A.
(c) For the ideal ammeter with zero resistance,
I = 3/3 = 1.00 A

SUMMARY

1. The total force on a charge q moving with velocity v in the presence of


magnetic and electric fields B and E, respectively is called the Lorentz
force. It is given by the expression:
F = q (v × B + E)
The magnetic force q (v × B) is normal to v and work done by it is zero.
2. A straight conductor of length l and carrying a steady current I
experiences a force F in a uniform external magnetic field B,
F=Il×B
where|l| = l and the direction of l is given by the direction of the
current.
3. In a uniform magnetic field B, a charge q executes a circular orbit in
a plane normal to B. Its frequency of uniform circular motion is called
the cyclotron frequency and is given by:
qB
νc =
2 πm
This frequency is independent of the particle’s speed and radius. This
fact is exploited in a machine, the cyclotron, which is used to
accelerate charged particles.
4. The Biot-Savart law asserts that the magnetic field dB due to an
element dl carrying a steady current I at a point P at a distance r from
the current element is:
µ0 dl × r
dB = I
166 4π r3

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Moving Charges and
Magnetism

To obtain the total field at P, we must integrate this vector expression


over the entire length of the conductor.
5. The magnitude of the magnetic field due to a circular coil of radius R
carrying a current I at an axial distance x from the centre is

µ0 IR 2
B=
2( x + R 2 )3 / 2
2

At the centre this reduces to


µ0 I
B=
2R
6. Ampere’s Circuital Law: Let an open surface S be bounded by a loop
C. Then the Ampere’s law states that
Ñ B.d l = µ I where I refers to
∫C
0

the current passing through S. The sign of I is determined from the


right-hand rule. We have discussed a simplified form of this law. If B
is directed along the tangent to every point on the perimeter L of a
closed curve and is constant in magnitude along perimeter then,
BL = µ0 Ie
where Ie is the net current enclosed by the closed circuit.
7. The magnitude of the magnetic field at a distance R from a long,
straight wire carrying a current I is given by:

µ0 I
B=
2πR
The field lines are circles concentric with the wire.
8. The magnitude of the field B inside a long solenoid carrying a current
I is
B = µ0nI
where n is the number of turns per unit length. For a toroid one
obtains,

µ0 NI
B=
2 πr
where N is the total number of turns and r is the average radius.
9. Parallel currents attract and anti-parallel currents repel.
10. A planar loop carrying a current I, having N closely wound turns, and
an area A possesses a magnetic moment m where,
m=NIA
and the direction of m is given by the right-hand thumb rule : curl
the palm of your right hand along the loop with the fingers pointing
in the direction of the current. The thumb sticking out gives the
direction of m (and A)
When this loop is placed in a uniform magnetic field B, the force F on
it is: F = 0
And the torque on it is,
τ=m×B
In a moving coil galvanometer, this torque is balanced by a counter-
torque due to a spring, yielding
kφ = NI AB
167

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Physics
where φ is the equilibrium deflection and k the torsion constant of
the spring.
11. An electron moving around the central nucleus has a magnetic moment
µl given by:
e
µl = l
2m
where l is the magnitude of the angular momentum of the circulating
electron about the central nucleus. The smallest value of µl is called
the Bohr magneton µ B and it is µ B = 9.27×10–24 J/T
12. A moving coil galvanometer can be converted into a ammeter by
introducing a shunt resistance rs, of small value in parallel. It can be
converted into a voltmeter by introducing a resistance of a large value
in series.

Physical Quantity Symbol Nature Dimensions Units Remarks

Permeability of free µ0 Scalar [MLT –2A–2] T m A–1 4π × 10–7 T m A–1


space

Magnetic Field B Vector [M T –2A–1] T (telsa)

Magnetic Moment m Vector [L2A] A m2 or J/T

Torsion Constant k Scalar [M L2T –2] N m rad–1 Appears in MCG

POINTS TO PONDER

1. Electrostatic field lines originate at a positive charge and terminate at a


negative charge or fade at infinity. Magnetic field lines always form
closed loops.
2. The discussion in this Chapter holds only for steady currents which do
not vary with time.
When currents vary with time Newton’s third law is valid only if momentum
carried by the electromagnetic field is taken into account.
3. Recall the expression for the Lorentz force,
F = q (v × B + E)
This velocity dependent force has occupied the attention of some of the
greatest scientific thinkers. If one switches to a frame with instantaneous
velocity v, the magnetic part of the force vanishes. The motion of the
charged particle is then explained by arguing that there exists an
appropriate electric field in the new frame. We shall not discuss the
details of this mechanism. However, we stress that the resolution of this
paradox implies that electricity and magnetism are linked phenomena
(electromagnetism) and that the Lorentz force expression does not imply
a universal preferred frame of reference in nature.
4. Ampere’s Circuital law is not independent of the Biot-Savart law. It
can be derived from the Biot-Savart law. Its relationship to the
Biot-Savart law is similar to the relationship between Gauss’s law and
168 Coulomb’s law.

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Magnetism and
Matter

MAPPING INDIA’S MAGNETIC FIELD

Because of its practical application in prospecting, communication, and navigation, the


magnetic field of the earth is mapped by most nations with an accuracy comparable to
geographical mapping. In India over a dozen observatories exist, extending from
Trivandrum (now Thrivuvananthapuram) in the south to Gulmarg in the north. These
observatories work under the aegis of the Indian Institute of Geomagnetism (IIG), in Colaba,
Mumbai. The IIG grew out of the Colaba and Alibag observatories and was formally
established in 1971. The IIG monitors (via its nation-wide observatories), the geomagnetic
fields and fluctuations on land, and under the ocean and in space. Its services are used
by the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (ONGC), the National Institute of
Oceanography (NIO) and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). It is a part of
the world-wide network which ceaselessly updates the geomagnetic data. Now India has
a permanent station called Gangotri.

SUMMARY

1. The science of magnetism is old. It has been known since ancient times
that magnetic materials tend to point in the north-south direction; like
magnetic poles repel and unlike ones attract; and cutting a bar magnet
in two leads to two smaller magnets. Magnetic poles cannot be isolated.
2. When a bar magnet of dipole moment m is placed in a uniform magnetic
field B,
(a) the force on it is zero,
(b) the torque on it is m × B,
(c) its potential energy is –m.B, where we choose the zero of energy at
the orientation when m is perpendicular to B.
3. Consider a bar magnet of size l and magnetic moment m, at a distance
r from its mid-point, where r >>l, the magnetic field B due to this bar
is,
µ0 m
B= (along axis)
2πr3

µ0 m
=– (along equator)
4 πr3
4. Gauss’s law for magnetism states that the net magnetic flux through
any closed surface is zero

φB = ∑ Bi ∆S = 0
all area
elements ∆S

5. The earth’s magnetic field resembles that of a (hypothetical) magnetic


dipole located at the centre of the earth. The pole near the geographic
north pole of the earth is called the north magnetic pole. Similarly, the
pole near the geographic south pole is called the south magnetic pole.
This dipole is aligned making a small angle with the rotation axis of
the earth. The magnitude of the field on the earth’s surface ≈ 4 × 10–5 T. 197

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Physics
6. Three quantities are needed to specify the magnetic field of the earth
on its surface – the horizontal component, the magnetic declination,
and the magnetic dip. These are known as the elements of the earth’s
magnetic field.
7. Consider a material placed in an external magnetic field B0. The
magnetic intensity is defined as,
B
H= 0
µ0
The magnetisation M of the material is its dipole moment per unit volume.
The magnetic field B in the material is,
B = µ0 (H + M)
8. For a linear material M = χ H. So that B = µ H and χ is called the
magnetic susceptibility of the material. The three quantities, χ, the
relative magnetic permeability µr, and the magnetic permeability µ are
related as follows:
µ = µ0 µr
µr = 1+ χ
9. Magnetic materials are broadly classified as: diamagnetic, paramagnetic,
and ferromagnetic. For diamagnetic materials χ is negative and small
and for paramagnetic materials it is positive and small. Ferromagnetic
materials have large χ and are characterised by non-linear relation
between B and H. They show the property of hysteresis.
10. Substances, which at room temperature, retain their ferromagnetic
property for a long period of time are called permanent magnets.

Physical quantity Symbol Nature Dimensions Units Remarks

Permeability of µ0 Scalar [MLT–2 A–2] T m A–1 µ0/4π = 10–7


free space
Magnetic field, B Vector [MT–2 A–1] T (tesla) 104 G (gauss) = 1 T
Magnetic induction,
Magnetic flux density
Magnetic moment m Vector [L–2 A] A m2
Magnetic flux φB Scalar [ML2T–2 A–1] W (weber) W = T m2

Magnetic moment
Magnetisation M Vector [L–1 A] A m–1
Volume
Magnetic intensity H Vector [L–1 A] A m–1 B = µ0 (H + M)
Magnetic field
strength
Magnetic χ Scalar - - M = χH
susceptibility
Relative magnetic µr Scalar - - B = µ0 µr H
permeability
Magnetic permeability µ Scalar [MLT–2 A–2] T m A–1 µ = µ0 µr
N A–2 B=µH

198

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Matter

POINTS TO PONDER

1. A satisfactory understanding of magnetic phenomenon in terms of moving


charges/currents was arrived at after 1800 AD. But technological
exploitation of the directional properties of magnets predates this scientific
understanding by two thousand years. Thus, scientific understanding is
not a necessary condition for engineering applications. Ideally, science
and engineering go hand-in-hand, one leading and assisting the other in
tandem.
2. Magnetic monopoles do not exist. If you slice a magnet in half, you get
two smaller magnets. On the other hand, isolated positive and negative
charges exist. There exists a smallest unit of charge, for example, the
electronic charge with value |e| = 1.6 ×10–19 C. All other charges are
integral multiples of this smallest unit charge. In other words, charge is
quantised. We do not know why magnetic monopoles do not exist or why
electric charge is quantised.
3. A consequence of the fact that magnetic monopoles do not exist is that
the magnetic field lines are continuous and form closed loops. In contrast,
the electrostatic lines of force begin on a positive charge and terminate
on the negative charge (or fade out at infinity).
4. The earth’s magnetic field is not due to a huge bar magnet inside it. The
earth’s core is hot and molten. Perhaps convective currents in this core
are responsible for the earth’s magnetic field. As to what ‘dynamo’ effect
sustains this current, and why the earth’s field reverses polarity every
million years or so, we do not know.
5. A miniscule difference in the value of χ, the magnetic susceptibility, yields
radically different behaviour: diamagnetic versus paramagnetic. For
diamagnetic materials χ = –10–5 whereas χ = +10–5 for paramagnetic
materials.
6. There exists a perfect diamagnet, namely, a superconductor. This is a
metal at very low temperatures. In this case χ = –1, µr = 0, µ = 0. The
external magnetic field is totally expelled. Interestingly, this material is
also a perfect conductor. However, there exists no classical theory which
ties these two properties together. A quantum-mechanical theory by
Bardeen, Cooper, and Schrieffer (BCS theory) explains these effects. The
BCS theory was proposed in1957 and was eventually recognised by a Nobel
Prize in physics in 1970.
7. The phenomenon of magnetic hysteresis is reminiscent of similar
behaviour concerning the elastic properties of materials. Strain
may not be proportional to stress; here H and B (or M) are not
linearly related. The stress-strain curve exhibits hysteresis and
area enclosed by it represents the energy dissipated per unit volume.
A similar interpretation can be given to the B-H magnetic hysteresis
curve.
8. Diamagnetism is universal. It is present in all materials. But it
is weak and hard to detect if the substance is para- or ferromagnetic.
9. We have classified materials as diamagnetic, paramagnetic, and
ferromagnetic. However, there exist additional types of magnetic material
such as ferrimagnetic, anti-ferromagnetic, spin glass, etc. with properties
which are exotic and mysterious.

199

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EXERCISES
5.1 Answer the following questions regarding earth’s magnetism:
(a) A vector needs three quantities for its specification. Name the
three independent quantities conventionally used to specify the
earth’s magnetic field.
(b) The angle of dip at a location in southern India is about 18°.
Would you expect a greater or smaller dip angle in Britain?
(c) If you made a map of magnetic field lines at Melbourne in
Australia, would the lines seem to go into the ground or come out
of the ground?
(d) In which direction would a compass free to move in the vertical
plane point to, if located right on the geomagnetic north or south
pole?
(e) The earth’s field, it is claimed, roughly approximates the field
due to a dipole of magnetic moment 8 × 1022 J T–1 located at its
centre. Check the order of magnitude of this number in some
way.
(f ) Geologists claim that besides the main magnetic N-S poles, there
are several local poles on the earth’s surface oriented in different
directions. How is such a thing possible at all?
5.2 Answer the following questions:
(a) The earth’s magnetic field varies from point to point in space.
Does it also change with time? If so, on what time scale does it
change appreciably?
(b) The earth’s core is known to contain iron. Yet geologists do not
regard this as a source of the earth’s magnetism. Why?
(c) The charged currents in the outer conducting regions of the
earth’s core are thought to be responsible for earth’s magnetism.
What might be the ‘battery’ (i.e., the source of energy) to sustain
these currents?
(d) The earth may have even reversed the direction of its field several
times during its history of 4 to 5 billion years. How can geologists
know about the earth’s field in such distant past?
(e) The earth’s field departs from its dipole shape substantially at
large distances (greater than about 30,000 km). What agencies
may be responsible for this distortion?
(f ) Interstellar space has an extremely weak magnetic field of the
order of 10–12 T. Can such a weak field be of any significant
consequence? Explain.
[Note: Exercise 5.2 is meant mainly to arouse your curiosity.
Answers to some questions above are tentative or unknown. Brief
answers wherever possible are given at the end. For details, you
should consult a good text on geomagnetism.]
5.3 A short bar magnet placed with its axis at 30° with a uniform external
magnetic field of 0.25 T experiences a torque of magnitude equal to
4.5 × 10–2 J. What is the magnitude of magnetic moment of the magnet?
5.4 A short bar magnet of magnetic moment m = 0.32 J T –1 is placed in a
uniform magnetic field of 0.15 T. If the bar is free to rotate in the
plane of the field, which orientation would correspond to its (a) stable,
and (b) unstable equilibrium? What is the potential energy of the
200 magnet in each case?

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Electromagnetic
Induction

MIGRATION OF BIRDS
The migratory pattern of birds is one of the mysteries in the field of biology, and indeed all
of science. For example, every winter birds from Siberia fly unerringly to water spots in the
Indian subcontinent. There has been a suggestion that electromagnetic induction may
provide a clue to these migratory patterns. The earth’s magnetic field has existed throughout
evolutionary history. It would be of great benefit to migratory birds to use this field to
determine the direction. As far as we know birds contain no ferromagnetic material. So
electromagnetic induction seems to be the only reasonable mechanism to determine
direction. Consider the optimal case where the magnetic field B, the velocity of the bird v,
and two relevant points of its anatomy separated by a distance l, all three are mutually
perpendicular. From the formula for motional emf, Eq. (6.5),
ε = Blv
Taking B = 4 × 10–5 T, l = 2 cm wide, and v = 10 m/s, we obtain
ε = 4 × 10–5 × 2 × 10–2 × 10 V = 8 × 10–6 V
= 8 µV
This extremely small potential difference suggests that our hypothesis is of doubtful
validity. Certain kinds of fish are able to detect small potential differences. However, in
these fish, special cells have been identified which detect small voltage differences. In birds
no such cells have been identified. Thus, the migration patterns of birds continues to remain
a mystery.

SUMMARY

1. The magnetic flux through a surface of area A placed in a uniform magnetic


field B is defined as,
ΦB = B.A = BA cos θ
where θ is the angle between B and A.
2. Faraday’s laws of induction imply that the emf induced in a coil of N
turns is directly related to the rate of change of flux through it,
dΦB
ε = −N
dt
Here Φ Β is the flux linked with one turn of the coil. If the circuit is
closed, a current I = ε/R is set up in it, where R is the resistance of the
circuit.
3. Lenz’s law states that the polarity of the induced emf is such that it
tends to produce a current which opposes the change in magnetic flux
that produces it. The negative sign in the expression for Faraday’s law
indicates this fact.
4. When a metal rod of length l is placed normal to a uniform magnetic
field B and moved with a velocity v perpendicular to the field, the
induced emf (called motional emf ) across its ends is
ε = Bl v
5. Changing magnetic fields can set up current loops in nearby metal
(any conductor) bodies. They dissipate electrical energy as heat. Such
currents are eddy currents.
6. Inductance is the ratio of the flux-linkage to current. It is equal to NΦ/I. 227

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Physics
7. A changing current in a coil (coil 2) can induce an emf in a nearby coil
(coil 1). This relation is given by,
dI 2
ε1 = − M 12
dt
The quantity M12 is called mutual inductance of coil 1 with respect to
coil 2. One can similarly define M21. There exists a general equality,
M12 = M21
8. When a current in a coil changes, it induces a back emf in the same
coil. The self-induced emf is given by,
dI
ε = −L
dt
L is the self-inductance of the coil. It is a measure of the inertia of the
coil against the change of current through it.
9. The self-inductance of a long solenoid, the core of which consists of a
magnetic material of permeability µr, is given by
L = µr µ0 n2 A l
where A is the area of cross-section of the solenoid, l its length and n
the number of turns per unit length.
10. In an ac generator, mechanical energy is converted to electrical energy
by virtue of electromagnetic induction. If coil of N turn and area A is
rotated at ν revolutions per second in a uniform magnetic field B, then
the motional emf produced is
ε = NBA ( 2πν ) sin (2π ν t)
where we have assumed that at time t = 0 s, the coil is perpendicular to
the field.

Quantity Symbol Units Dimensions Equations

Magnetic Flux ΦB Wb (weber) [M L2 T –2 A–1] ΦB = B i A


EMF ε V (volt) 2 –3
[M L T A ] –1
ε = − d( N ΦB )/ dt
Mutual Inductance M H (henry) [M L2 T –2 A–2] ε 1 = −M12 (dI 2 / dt )

Self Inductance L H (henry) [M L2 T –2 A–2] ε = − L ( dI / d t )

POINTS TO PONDER

1. Electricity and magnetism are intimately related. In the early part of the
nineteenth century, the experiments of Oersted, Ampere and others
established that moving charges (currents) produce a magnetic field.
Somewhat later, around 1830, the experiments of Faraday and Henry
demonstrated that a moving magnet can induce electric current.
2. In a closed circuit, electric currents are induced so as to oppose the
changing magnetic flux. It is as per the law of conservation of energy.
However, in case of an open circuit, an emf is induced across its ends.
How is it related to the flux change?
3. The motional emf discussed in Section 6.5 can be argued independently
228 from Faraday’s law using the Lorentz force on moving charges. However,

2019-20
Electromagnetic
Induction

even if the charges are stationary [and the q (v × B) term of the Lorentz
force is not operative], an emf is nevertheless induced in the presence of a
time-varying magnetic field. Thus, moving charges in static field and static
charges in a time-varying field seem to be symmetric situation for
Faraday’s law. This gives a tantalising hint on the relevance of the principle
of relativity for Faraday’s law.
4. The motion of a copper plate is damped when it is allowed to oscillate
between the magnetic pole-pieces. How is the damping force, produced by
the eddy currents?

EXERCISES
6.1 Predict the direction of induced current in the situations described
by the following Figs. 6.18(a) to (f ).

FIGURE 6.18 229

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Physics
The large scale transmission and distribution of electrical energy over
long distances is done with the use of transformers. The voltage output
of the generator is stepped-up (so that current is reduced and
consequently, the I 2R loss is cut down). It is then transmitted over long
distances to an area sub-station near the consumers. There the voltage
is stepped down. It is further stepped down at distributing sub-stations
and utility poles before a power supply of 240 V reaches our homes.

SUMMARY

1. An alternating voltage v = vm sin ω t applied to a resistor R drives a


vm
current i = im sinωt in the resistor, im = . The current is in phase with
R
the applied voltage.
2. For an alternating current i = im sin ωt passing through a resistor R, the
average power loss P (averaged over a cycle) due to joule heating is
( 1/2 )i 2mR. To express it in the same form as the dc power (P = I 2R), a
special value of current is used. It is called root mean square (rms)
current and is donoted by I:
im
I = = 0.707 im
2
Similarly, the rms voltage is defined by

vm
V = = 0.707 vm
2
We have P = IV = I 2R
3. An ac voltage v = vm sin ωt applied to a pure inductor L, drives a current
in the inductor i = im sin (ωt – π/2), where im = vm/XL. XL = ωL is called
inductive reactance. The current in the inductor lags the voltage by
π/2. The average power supplied to an inductor over one complete cycle
is zero.
4. An ac voltage v = vm sinωt applied to a capacitor drives a current in the
capacitor: i = im sin (ωt + π/2). Here,
vm 1
im = , XC =
XC ωC is called capacitive reactance.
The current through the capacitor is π/2 ahead of the applied voltage.
As in the case of inductor, the average power supplied to a capacitor
over one complete cycle is zero.
5. For a series RLC circuit driven by voltage v = vm sin ωt, the current is
given by i = im sin (ωt + φ )
vm
where im =
R2 + ( XC − X L )
2

XC − X L
and φ = tan −1
R

Z = R2 + ( X C − X L )
2
is called the impedance of the circuit.
262

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Alternating Current

The average power loss over a complete cycle is given by


P = V I cosφ
The term cosφ is called the power factor.
6. In a purely inductive or capacitive circuit, cosφ = 0 and no power is
dissipated even though a current is flowing in the circuit. In such cases,
current is referred to as a wattless current.
7. The phase relationship between current and voltage in an ac circuit
can be shown conveniently by representing voltage and current by
rotating vectors called phasors. A phasor is a vector which rotates
about the origin with angular speed ω. The magnitude of a phasor
represents the amplitude or peak value of the quantity (voltage or
current) represented by the phasor.
The analysis of an ac circuit is facilitated by the use of a phasor
diagram.
8. An interesting characteristic of a series RLC circuit is the
phenomenon of resonance. The circuit exhibits resonance, i.e.,
the amplitude of the current is maximum at the resonant
1
frequency, ω 0 = . The quality factor Q defined by
LC

ω0 L 1
Q= = is an indicator of the sharpness of the resonance,
R ω 0CR
the higher value of Q indicating sharper peak in the current.
9. A circuit containing an inductor L and a capacitor C (initially
charged) with no ac source and no resistors exhibits free
oscillations. The charge q of the capacitor satisfies the equation
of simple harmonic motion:

d2q 1
2
+ q=0
dt LC

1
and therefore, the frequency ω of free oscillation is ω 0 = . The
LC
energy in the system oscillates between the capacitor and the
inductor but their sum or the total energy is constant in time.
10. A transformer consists of an iron core on which are bound a
primary coil of Np turns and a secondary coil of N s turns. If the
primary coil is connected to an ac source, the primary and
secondary voltages are related by

N 
Vs =  s  V p
 Np 
and the currents are related by

 Np 
Is =  Ip
 Ns 
If the secondary coil has a greater number of turns than the primary, the
voltage is stepped-up (Vs > Vp). This type of arrangement is called a step-
up transformer. If the secondary coil has turns less than the primary, we
have a step-down transformer.
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Physics
Physical quantity Symbol Dimensions Unit Remarks

2 –3 –1 vm
rms voltage V [M L T A ] V V = , vm is the
2
amplitude of the ac voltage.

im
rms current I [ A] A I= , im is the amplitude of
2
the ac current.

Reactance:
XL = ω L
2 –3 –2
Inductive XL [M L T A ]
XC = 1/ ω C
2 –3 –2
Capacitive XC [M L T A ]
2 –3 –2
Impedance Z [M L T A ] Depends on elements
present in the circuit.

1
Resonant ωr or ω0 [T ]
–1
Hz ω0 = for a
frequency LC
series RLC circuit

ω0 L 1
Quality factor Q Dimensionless Q= = for a series
R ω0 C R
RLC circuit.
Power factor Dimensionless = cos φ , φ is the phase
difference between voltage
applied and current in
the circuit.

POINTS TO PONDER

1. When a value is given for ac voltage or current, it is ordinarily the rms


value. The voltage across the terminals of an outlet in your room is
normally 240 V. This refers to the rms value of the voltage. The amplitude
of this voltage is

vm = 2V = 2(240) = 340 V
2. The power rating of an element used in ac circuits refers to its average
power rating.
3. The power consumed in an ac circuit is never negative.
4. Both alternating current and direct current are measured in amperes.
But how is the ampere defined for an alternating current? It cannot be
derived from the mutual attraction of two parallel wires carrying ac
264 currents, as the dc ampere is derived. An ac current changes direction

2019-20
Alternating Current

with the source frequency and the attractive force would average to
zero. Thus, the ac ampere must be defined in terms of some property
that is independent of the direction of the current. Joule heating
is such a property, and there is one ampere of rms value of
alternating current in a circuit if the current produces the same
average heating effect as one ampere of dc current would produce
under the same conditions.
5. In an ac circuit, while adding voltages across different elements, one
should take care of their phases properly. For example, if V R and VC
are voltages across R and C, respectively in an RC circuit, then the

total voltage across RC combination is VRC = VR2 + VC2 and not


VR + VC since V C is π/2 out of phase of V R.
6. Though in a phasor diagram, voltage and current are represented by
vectors, these quantities are not really vectors themselves. They are
scalar quantities. It so happens that the amplitudes and phases of
harmonically varying scalars combine mathematically in the same
way as do the projections of rotating vectors of corresponding
magnitudes and directions. The ‘rotating vectors’ that represent
harmonically varying scalar quantities are introduced only to provide
us with a simple way of adding these quantities using a rule that
we already know as the law of vector addition.
7. There are no power losses associated with pure capacitances and pure
inductances in an ac circuit. The only element that dissipates energy
in an ac circuit is the resistive element.
8. In a RLC circuit, resonance phenomenon occur when XL = X C or
1
ω0 = . For resonance to occur, the presence of both L and C
LC
elements in the circuit is a must. With only one of these (L or C )
elements, there is no possibility of voltage cancellation and hence,
no resonance is possible.
9. The power factor in a RLC circuit is a measure of how close the
circuit is to expending the maximum power.
10. In generators and motors, the roles of input and output are
reversed. In a motor, electric energy is the input and mechanical
energy is the output. In a generator, mechanical energy is the
input and electric energy is the output. Both devices simply
transfor m energy from one form to another.
11. A transformer (step-up) changes a low-voltage into a high-voltage.
This does not violate the law of conservation of energy. The
current is reduced by the same proportion.
12. The choice of whether the description of an oscillatory motion is
by means of sines or cosines or by their linear combinations is
unimportant, since changing the zero-time position transforms
the one to the other.

265

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Physics

SUMMARY

1. Maxwell found an inconsistency in the Ampere’s law and suggested the


existence of an additional current, called displacement current, to remove
this inconsistency. This displacement current is due to time-varying electric
field and is given by
dΦΕ
id = ε0
dt
and acts as a source of magnetic field in exactly the same way as conduction
current.
2. An accelerating charge produces electromagnetic waves. An electric charge
oscillating harmonically with frequency ν, produces electromagnetic waves
of the same frequency ν . An electric dipole is a basic source of
electromagnetic waves.
3. Electromagnetic waves with wavelength of the order of a few metres were
first produced and detected in the laboratory by Hertz in 1887. He thus
verified a basic prediction of Maxwell’s equations.
4. Electric and magnetic fields oscillate sinusoidally in space and time in an
electromagnetic wave. The oscillating electric and magnetic fields, E and
B are perpendicular to each other, and to the direction of propagation of
the electromagnetic wave. For a wave of frequency ν, wavelength λ ,
propagating along z-direction, we have
E = Ex (t) = E0 sin (kz – ω t )

 z    z t 
= E0 sin 2π  λ − νt   = E 0 sin 2π  λ − T  
   
B = By(t) = B0 sin (kz – ω t)

 z    z t 
= B0 sin 2π  − νt   = B0 sin 2π  −  

 λ    λ T 
They are related by E0/B0 = c.
5. The speed c of electromagnetic wave in vacuum is related to µ0 and ε0 (the
free space permeability and permittivity constants) as follows:

c = 1/ µ0 ε 0 . The value of c equals the speed of light obtained from


optical measurements.
Light is an electromagnetic wave; c is, therefore, also the speed of light.
Electromagnetic waves other than light also have the same velocity c in
free space.
The speed of light, or of electromagnetic waves in a material medium is
given by v = 1/ µ ε
where µ is the permeability of the medium and ε its permittivity.
6. Electromagnetic waves carry energy as they travel through space and this
energy is shared equally by the electric and magnetic fields.
Electromagnetic waves transport momentum as well. When these waves
strike a surface, a pressure is exerted on the surface. If total energy
transferred to a surface in time t is U, total momentum delivered to this
surface is p = U/c.
7. The spectrum of electromagnetic waves stretches, in principle, over an
284 infinite range of wavelengths. Different regions are known by different

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Electromagnetic
Waves

names; γ-rays, X-rays, ultraviolet rays, visible rays, infrared rays,


microwaves and radio waves in order of increasing wavelength from 10–2 Å
or 10–12 m to 106 m.
They interact with matter via their electric and magnetic fields which set
in oscillation charges present in all matter. The detailed interaction and
so the mechanism of absorption, scattering, etc., depend on the wavelength
of the electromagnetic wave, and the nature of the atoms and molecules
in the medium.

POINTS TO PONDER

1. The basic difference between various types of electromagnetic waves


lies in their wavelengths or frequencies since all of them travel through
vacuum with the same speed. Consequently, the waves differ
considerably in their mode of interaction with matter.
2. Accelerated charged particles radiate electromagnetic waves. The
wavelength of the electromagnetic wave is often correlated with the
characteristic size of the system that radiates. Thus, gamma radiation,
having wavelength of 10–14 m to 10–15 m, typically originate from an
atomic nucleus. X-rays are emitted from heavy atoms. Radio waves
are produced by accelerating electrons in a circuit. A transmitting
antenna can most efficiently radiate waves having a wavelength of
about the same size as the antenna. Visible radiation emitted by atoms
is, however, much longer in wavelength than atomic size.
3. The oscillating fields of an electromagnetic wave can accelerate charges
and can produce oscillating currents. Therefore, an apparatus designed
to detect electromagnetic waves is based on this fact. Hertz original
‘receiver’ worked in exactly this way. The same basic principle is utilised
in practically all modern receiving devices. High frequency
electromagnetic waves are detected by other means based on the
physical effects they produce on interacting with matter.
4. Infrared waves, with frequencies lower than those of visible light,
vibrate not only the electrons, but entire atoms or molecules of a
substance. This vibration increases the internal energy and
consequently, the temperature of the substance. This is why infrared
waves are often called heat waves.
5. The centre of sensitivity of our eyes coincides with the centre of the
wavelength distribution of the sun. It is because humans have evolved
with visions most sensitive to the strongest wavelengths from
the sun.

EXERCISES
8.1 Figure 8.6 shows a capacitor made of two circular plates each of
radius 12 cm, and separated by 5.0 cm. The capacitor is being
charged by an external source (not shown in the figure). The
charging current is constant and equal to 0.15A.
(a) Calculate the capacitance and the rate of change of potential
difference between the plates. 285

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