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Electric currents & Electromagnetism Micro-world Macro-world Lecture 9

Electric currents & Electromagnetism

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Electric currents & Electromagnetism. Micro-world Macro-world Lecture 9. Electric currents. (Motion of electric charges). Micro-world Macro-world Lecture 9. Alessandro Volta. Positive Ions. Atoms with one or more electrons removed. _. _. +. +. +. _. _. _. +. +. _. _. _. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric currents& Electromagnetism

Micro-world Macro-worldLecture 9

Page 2: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric currents

Micro-world Macro-worldLecture 9

(Motion of electric charges)

Page 3: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Alessandro Volta

Page 4: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Positive Ions

_

_

_

_

++++

+

Atoms with one or moreelectrons removed

”net” charge = +2qe

_

_

_

_

Page 5: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Battery

C ZnZn

ZnZn

ZnZn++ - -

Zn++ - -

Zn++- -+ +

Zn++- -+ +

Zn

ZnZn - -+ +

acid

Page 6: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

“Voltage”Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

EZn++

F

+ ++

- - -

W = FddF = 2qeE

W = 2qeEd W0 = 2qeE0d =E0dW0 2qe V

“Voltage”

Page 7: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

F=QE0

+ ++

- - -

W = Fd

E0

Q F=QE0Q

=Q E0d = QV

d

Zn++

Zn++

Energy gained by the charge

Page 8: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Units again!

W = Q V

V = W Q

joules

coulombs

joules coulomb

= Volt

1 V = 1 joule coulomb

Page 9: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Continuous charge flow = “electric current”

Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

+ ++

- - -

Zn++

Zn++

Q Q

Electrical “conductor” connected between anode & cathode

Page 10: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

electric current

Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

+ ++

- - -

Zn++

Zn++

Q Q

I = Qt

Units:Coulombssecond

=Amperes

Page 11: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

The conductor can be a piece of wire

Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

+ ++

- - -

Zn++

Zn++

I = Qt

+ ++

Page 12: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

The energy can be used to run a gadget

Anode

+ ++ +

+ +

Cathode

-

- - - - -

+ ++

- - -

Zn++

Zn++

P= Energy

time

+ ++

QVt= = I V

I I I

Page 13: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric light

60 Watts I=?

T

Power = P = I V

I = P V = 60 W

100V

= 0.6 J/s J/C = 0.6 1/s

1/C

= 0.6 C s = 0.6 AV=100V

Page 14: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

General circuit

12V

+ -

Appliance+ -

Energy source(device that separates+ & - charge)

I

I

Page 15: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

analogy

Height ~ voltage

Pump ~battery

Amt of water flow ~ current

appliance

pond

pump

Page 16: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Voltas’ 1st batteries

Page 17: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Christian Oersted

Page 18: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric currents produce B-fields

I

B

Page 19: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Right-hand rule

B

Page 20: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Current loop

NS

Page 21: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Two current loops

NS

Page 22: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Even more loops

NS

Page 23: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Solenoid coil

Looks like abar magnet

SN

Page 24: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Atomic magnetism

+- I

B

Some atoms are little magnets

Page 25: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Permanent magnet-microscopic view-

Page 26: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Magnetic forces on electric currents

I

Page 27: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Another right-hand rule

I

Page 28: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Forces on two parallel wires

II

Current in samedirection:

wires attractB

Page 29: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Forces on two parallel wires

I

I

Current in oppositedirections:

wires repelB

Page 30: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Force law of Biot & Savart

I2I1

F =

B

I1I2 ld

l

d

= 2 x 10-7 NA2

Page 31: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Biot & Savart example

20A F =

B

I1I2 ld

2m

0.01m

F = 2 x 10-7 NA2

20A

(20A)2 2m0.01m

F = 2 x 10-3N

Small, but not tiny

Page 32: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric motor

IB

F

IF

Page 33: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electric motor

I

B

Page 34: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Speakers

Permanentmagnet

SolenoidElectro-magnet

Page 35: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Lorentz force

B

+q

v

i=qv

F

F = iB = qvBif v B:

direction by the right-hand rule

Page 36: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electromagnetism

Michael Faraday

Faraday’s Law

Page 37: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Moving a Conductor in a B-fieldseparates + & - charges

I

Page 38: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Use this to drive an electric circuit

+

+I

+

+

+

Page 39: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Moving wire loop in a B field

+

+

v

An electric current is“induced” in the loop

Page 40: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Either the magnet or the loop can move

+

+

v

an electric current is“induced” in the loop

Page 41: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Magnetic flux () thru a loop

= BA┴

Page 42: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Flux thru a coil of N loops

= N BA┴

Page 43: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Faraday’s law

change in N BA┴elapsed time

Induced voltage in a circuit = change in elapsed time

EMF =

“Electro-Motive Force”

Michael Faraday

Page 44: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Rotating coil in B field

A┴ = 0 =0

B

Page 45: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Rotating coil in B field

A┴ = Acoil = maximum

B

Page 46: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Rotating coil in B field

A┴ = 0 (again) = 0

B

Page 47: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

AC voltage

Page 48: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Lenz’ Law

v v

B B

+ +N

S

the fall producesan induced current

the B-field producedby the induced currenttries to impede the fall

B-field from induced currentB-field from

induced currentI

Page 49: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Lenz’ law

An induced voltage always gives rise to an electric current that creates a magnetic field that opposes the influence that produced it.

Page 50: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Maglev trains

Page 51: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Maglev

Page 52: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Maxwell’s Equations

James Clerk Maxwell

“…and then there was light.”

Page 53: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Properties of E & B fields

• Coulomb’s law: E-field lines start on + charge & end on – charge

• Ampere’s law: B-fields are produced by electric currents

• Faraday’s law: Changing B-fields produce E-fields

• (un-named law): B-field lines never end

Page 54: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

In equation form:

E-field lines start on +charges & end on - charges

B-field lines never end

E-fields are produced by changing B fields

B-fields are produced by electric currents

Page 55: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Maxwell

The previous equations, as written, are mathematically inconsistent with the conservation of electric charge. He found he could fix this by adding one more term:

B-fields are produced by changing E-fields

Page 56: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Maxwell’s equations

B-fields are produced by changing E-fields

Page 57: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Fields from an electric charge

+

xE

+

E

Is the change in Einstantaneous?

Does it occur onlyafter some time?

M.E.s can tell us?

Page 58: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

fun in the bathtub

Water level will increase

but not instantaneously

1st waves will propagatefrom her entrance pointto the edge of the tub

Page 59: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

According to Maxwell’s eqs:

+

xE

+

E

The change in Eis not instantaneous

1st waves made of E-fields & B-fields propagate thru space.

Page 60: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Wave solutions to Maxwell’s Eqs:

Fc = k q1q2

r2

k = 9.0 x 109 Nm2/C2

k ”strength” of electric force

FM = I1I2 ld

= 2 x 10-7NA2

”strength” of magnetic force

2k

Wave speed =

2x9x109Nm2/C2

2x10-7N/A2

=

9x109+7(m2/C2)xA2=

9x1016m2/s2=

= 3x108m/s Speed of lig

ht!!

Page 61: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

“…let there be light.”

Maxwell’s equations have solutions that are waves of oscillating E- & B-fields that travel at the speed of light.

Faraday & Maxwell made the immediate (& correct) inference that these waves are, in fact, light waves.

Page 62: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

EM waves

-

+-+

+

-

Page 63: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

antennaE

B

Page 64: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

antenna

E

B

Page 65: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Light wave

E-field

B-field

wave velocity

+

-

Page 66: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Light wave animation

E

B

Page 67: Electric currents & Electromagnetism

Electro-magnetic “spectrum”

Visible light: freq (c/)

Red 0.75x10-6m 4.0x1014 Hz

Green 0.55x10-6m 5.5x1014 Hz

Violet 0.4x10-6m 7.5x1014 Hz

Ultr

a-vi

olet

Infr

a-re

d

X- rays

- rays

mic

ro

wav

esra

dio

wav

es

TV/F

M

AM