Lecture 17 Physics II Chapter 33 Faraday’s Law Course website: http://faculty.uml.edu/Andriy_Danylov/Teaching/PhysicsII Lecture Capture: http://echo360.uml.edu/danylov201415/physics2spring.html 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Electromagnetic induction We saw that a magnetic field could be produced with an electric current. The question arose as to whether electric current could be produced from a magnetic field. El. current Magn. field El. current Magn. field This discovery changed the world. It allowed making electricity to power industries. 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Electromagnetic induction By experimenting Faraday concluded that a changing magnetic field can produce an electric current, which is called an induced current. The process is called electromagnetic induction. When a bar magnet is pushed into a coil of wire, it causes a momentary deflection of the current‐meter needle. Holding the magnet inside the coil has no effect. I A quick withdrawal of the magnet deflects the needle in the other direction. A changing magnetic field induces an EMF I 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Magnetic Flux 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics The Area Vector Let’s define an area vector to be a vector in the direction of, perpendicular to the surface, with a magnitude A equal to the area of the surface. Vector has units of m2. 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Slide 33-44 Magnetic Flux The magnetic flux measures the amount of magnetic field passing through a loop of area A if the loop is tilted at an angle from the field: θ In the case when magnetic field is not uniform and a surface is not flat, than the magnetic flux is ⋅ The SI unit of magnetic flux is the weber: 1 weber = 1 Wb = 1 T m2 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Example: Determining flux A square loop of wire encloses area A1. A uniform magnetic field B perpendicular to the loop extends over the area A2. What is the magnetic flux through the loop A1? ⋅ 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 ⋅ Department of Physics and Applied Physics ) ⋅ 0 ) ⋅ ⋅ ConcepTest Electrical generator The metal loop is being pulled through a uniform magnetic field. Is the magnetic flux through the loop changing? B=const A=const Theta=const, So the flux is const A) yes B) no ConcepTest Electrical generator II The metal loop is rotating in a uniform magnetic field. Is the magnetic flux through the loop changing? B=const A=const Theta=changes, So the flux is NOT const A) yes B) no Faraday’s Law 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Faraday’s Law Now with the definition of flux, we can write mathematically what Faraday saw experimentally Faraday’s law of induction: the emf induced in a circuit is equal to the rate of change of magnetic flux through the circuit: ) So we can induce EMF by changing: B, θ, A: Spinning a loop θ 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics a loop is shrunk Lenz’s Law The minus sign gives the direction of the induced emf. To avoid dealing with this minus, we will calculate EMF in two steps: 1) 2) Apply Lenz’s Law i.e. “Any system doesn’t like changes” It opposes to a growing flux And Supports a dying flux 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Lenz’s Law (example) Pushing the bar magnet into the loop causes the magnetic flux to increase in the upward direction. To oppose the change in flux, which is what Lenz’s law requires, the loop itself needs to generate an downward-pointing magnetic field. The induced current ceases as soon as the magnet stops moving. has CW direction 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Example (Lenz’s Law) The current in the straight wire is decreasing. I has CW direction 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics ConcepTest The current in the straight wire is increasing. Which is true? Lenz’s law A) There is a clockwise induced current in the loop. B) There is a counterclockwise induced current in the loop C) There is no induced current in the loop. 1. The wire’s B field is into the screen and increasing. 2. To oppose the increase in flux, the field of the induced current must point out of the screen. 3. From the right-hand rule, an inward field needs a ccw current. has CCW direction ConcepTest Loop and Wire II What is the induced current if 1) clockwise the wire loop moves in the 2) counterclockwise direction of the yellow arrow? 3) no induced current The magnetic flux through the loop is not changing as it moves parallel to the wire. Therefore, there is no induced current. I Faraday’s Law for a U-shaped rail/rod system Let’s apply Faraday’s law for a conducting rod sliding on a U-shaped conducting rail. B is perpendicular to the plane of the rail. We can find the induced emf and current by using Faraday’s law and Ohm’s law: The EMF induced in the loop is: The induced current flows through the loop: Direction of the induced current: has CCW direction 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics ConcepTest Faraday’s Law A) 200 V The induced emf around this loop is B) 20 V C) 2 V D) 0.5 V E) 0.2 V What you should read Chapter 33 (Knight) Sections 33.3 33.4 33.5 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Thank you See you on Tuesday 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics Recall Faraday’s experiment We saw that a moving magnet through the loop can cause an induced current. How can it be explained? 95.144 Danylov Lecture 17 Department of Physics and Applied Physics