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Magnetic Field near a Moving Charge
You are a collector of magnetic field detectors. A fellow detector collector is trying to trim down her collection, and so it's your job to see if an old detector is still working properly, in which case it's yours! Today, you are a magnetic field detector collector, inspector, and hopefully a selector. First, you run a test in which a charged particle (q=15 nC) is sent through the detector, and you look at the detector's readings to see if the detector seems to be working properly. The particle is travelling at 2 m/s and you need to predict the magnetic field's magnitude and direction at the points shown below. Be careful! – You'll be using vectors.
Facts
- v=2 m/s ˆx
- The locations of interest are indicated below, if the particle is at the origin.
- →r1=−0.5 m ˆx
- →r2=0.5 m ˆy
- →r3=−0.5 m ˆx+0.5 m ˆy
- q=15 nC
Lacking
- →B1, →B2, →B3
Approximations & Assumptions
- The particle can be treated as a point particle..
- We are only interested in the B-field at this specific moment in time.
Representations
- We represent the Biot-Savart Law for magnetic field from a moving point charge as
→B=μ04πq→v×→rr3
- We represent the situation with diagram given above.
Solution
We begin by cracking open the Biot-Savart Law. In order to find magnetic field, we will need to take a cross product →v×→r. Notice that →r indicates a separation vector, directed from source (point particle) to observation (location 1, 2, or 3). Since our source is at the origin of our axes, then the separation vectors are actually just →rsep=→robs−0=→robs, which are just the r-vectors listed in our “Facts”. Below, we have calculated the cross product for each of our three locations: →v×→r1=0→v×→r2=1 m2s−1ˆz→v×→r3=1 m2s−1ˆz Note that the first cross-product is 0 because location 1 is situated perfectly in line with the straight-line path of the particle. There is no magnetic field at location 1 at all! The other two cross-products are the same because locations 2 and 3 are equidistant from this path. Though they are difference distances from the particle itself, the ˆx portion of location 3's separation vector does not contribute at all to the cross-product.
Next, we find the magnitudes of r3, since that is another quantity we need to know in the Biot-Savart Law. r23=0.125 m3r33=0.354 m3
We don't including location 1 above since we already know the magnetic field is 0 at that location! Below, we give the magnetic field at all three locations.
→B1=0→B2=μ04πq→v×→r2r23=12 nT ˆz→B3=μ04πq→v×→r3r33=4.2 nT ˆz