Magnetic Effects of Current & Magnetism
Apply concepts from Magnetic Effects of Current & Magnetism to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.
Concept Core
The Biot-Savart law is the magnetic analog of Coulomb's law.
It gives the magnetic field dB produced by a small current element Idl at a point P at distance r: dB = ( )(Idl sin / ), where = 4 x T m/A is the permeability of free space; [] = [M L ]; [B] = [M ], SI unit: tesla (T). The direction of dB is given by the right-hand rule: curl fingers from dl toward r-hat, and the thumb points along dB.
For an infinitely long straight conductor: B = I/(2 d), where d is the perpendicular distance; [B] = [M ], SI unit: T.
For a finite wire, B = ( I/4 d)(sin + sin ). The field forms concentric circles around the wire; direction follows the right-hand thumb rule (thumb along current, curled fingers give B direction).
At the center of a circular loop of N turns and radius R carrying current I: B = NI/(2R).
On the axis at distance x: B = / [2( + )^()].
For a solenoid: B = nI (inside, uniform), where n = N/L is the number of turns per unit length; outside the solenoid, B is approximately zero.
Ampere's circuital law: The line integral of B along a closed loop equals times the enclosed current: = . This is most useful with high symmetry (infinite wire, solenoid, toroid).
For a toroid: B = NI/(2 r) inside the toroid, zero outside.
The Lorentz force on a charge q moving with velocity v in electric field E and magnetic field B is F = q(E + v x B).
The magnetic component F = qvB sin is always perpendicular to v, so it does NO work — it changes direction, not speed.
A charge moving perpendicular to B follows a circular path: radius r = mv/(qB); [r] = [L], SI unit: m.
The time period T = 2 m/(qB) is independent of velocity and radius; [T] = [T], SI unit: s.
The frequency f = qB/(2 m).
If v has a component along B, the motion is helical with pitch = x T.
Force on a current-carrying conductor: F = BIl sin ; [F] = [M L ], SI unit: N.
Force between parallel conductors: F/l = /(2 d); same-direction currents attract, opposite currents repel. This defines the ampere: 1 A produces a force of 2 x N/m between two infinite parallel wires 1 m apart.
Torque on a current loop in a magnetic field: = NIAB sin = MB sin , where M = NIA is the magnetic moment; [M] = [A ], SI unit: A ; [] = [M ], SI unit: N m.
The moving coil galvanometer uses torque on a current loop: deflection = (NAB/k)I, where k is the torsional constant of the spring.
Current sensitivity = /I = NAB/k.
To convert to an ammeter, connect a low-resistance shunt S = G/(I - ) in parallel.
To convert to a voltmeter, connect a high resistance R = V/ - G in series.
Magnetic materials: Diamagnetic ( < 0, < 1; examples: Cu, Bi, — weakly repelled by field), Paramagnetic ( > 0 small, slightly > 1; examples: Al, — weakly attracted), Ferromagnetic ( >> 0, >> 1; examples: Fe, Co, Ni — strongly attracted).
Curie's law: = C/T for paramagnets. Above the Curie temperature, ferromagnets become paramagnetic. The hysteresis loop shows retentivity (residual magnetism) and coercivity (field needed to demagnetize): soft ferromagnets (low coercivity, electromagnets) vs hard ferromagnets (high coercivity, permanent magnets).
The key testable concept is the magnetic field due to various current configurations (Biot-Savart and Ampere's law) combined with the force on charges and conductors in magnetic fields, which together dominate NEET questions from this chapter.
Solved Numericals
N1. A circular coil of 100 turns, radius 10 cm carries a current of 2 A. Find the magnetic field at the center and at a point 10 cm along the axis.
Given: N = 100, R = 10 cm = 0.10 m, I = 2 A, = 4 x T m/A.
At center (x = 0): = NI/(2R) = (4 x T m/A x 100 x 2 A) / (2 x 0.10 m) = (4 x x 200) / 0.20 T = (800 x ) / 0.20 T = 4000 x T = 4 x T = 1.257 x T = 1.257 mT.
At axial point x = 10 cm = 0.10 m = R: = / [2( + )^()] = (4 x x 100 x 2 x (0.10)2) / [2 x (0.01 + 0.01)^()] = (4 x x 200 x 0.01) / [2 x (0.02)^()] Numerator = 4 x x 2 = 8 x . (0.02)^() = (0.02)1 x (0.02)^() = 0.02 x 0.1414 = 2.828 x . Denominator = 2 x 2.828 x = 5.657 x . = 8 x / 5.657 x = 8 x / 5.657 = 25.13 x / 5.657 = 4.44 x T = 0.444 mT.
The field at the axial point (x = R) is /(2 ) = 1..828 = 0.444 mT. Verified.
N2. A proton (m = 1.67 x kg, q = 1.6 x C) enters a uniform magnetic field B = 0.1 T perpendicular to its velocity of m/s. Find the radius, time period, and frequency.
Radius: r = mv/(qB) = (1.67 x kg x m/s) / (1.6 x C x 0.1 T) = 1.67 x / 1.6 x m = 0.104 m = 10.4 cm.
Time period: T = 2 m/(qB) = 2 x 1.67 x / (1.6 x x 0.1) = 2 x 1.67 x / 1.6 x = 2 x 1.044 x s = 6.56 x s = 0.656 us.
Frequency: f = 1/T = 1/(6.56 x ) = 1.524 x Hz = 1.524 MHz.
Note: T and f are independent of velocity. A faster proton traces a larger circle in the same time.
N3. A galvanometer with resistance G = 50 ohm gives full-scale deflection for = 1 mA. Find (a) shunt to convert to ammeter of range 0-5 A, and (b) series resistance for voltmeter of range 0-10 V.
(a) Ammeter (shunt in parallel): S = G / (I - ) = (1 x A x 50 ohm) / (5 - 0.001) A = 0.050 / 4.999 ohm = 0.01 ohm (approximately).
Effective resistance of ammeter = GS/(G + S) = 50 x 0.01 / 50.01 = 0.01 ohm (very low, as required).
(b) Voltmeter (series resistance): R = V/ - G = 10 V / (1 x A) - 50 ohm = 10000 - 50 = 9950 ohm.
Effective resistance of voltmeter = G + R = 50 + 9950 = 10000 ohm = 10 k-ohm (very high, as required).
Key Testable Concept
Effective resistance of voltmeter = G + R = 50 + 9950 = 10000 ohm = 10 k-ohm (very high, as required).
Comparison Tables
A) Formula Table — Magnetic Field Configurations
| Source | Formula | Variables | Dimensional Formula | SI Unit | Direction Rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biot-Savart (element) | dB = ()(Idl sin ) | I = current, dl = element length, = angle between dl and r, r = distance | [M ] | T | Right-hand rule: dl x r-hat |
| Infinite straight wire | B = I/(2 d) | d = perpendicular distance | [M ] | T | Thumb rule: concentric circles |
| Finite wire | B = ( I/4 d)(sin + sin ) | , = angles subtended at endpoints | [M ] | T | Same as infinite wire |
| Circular loop (center) | B = NI/(2R) | N = turns, R = radius | [M ] | T | Right-hand curl: fingers along current, thumb gives B |
| Circular loop (axis) | B = /[2(+)^()] | x = axial distance | [M ] | T | Along axis, same as center |
| Solenoid (inside) | B = nI | n = N/L (turns/length) | [M ] | T | Along axis, uniform |
| Toroid (inside) | B = NI/(2 r) | N = total turns, r = distance from center | [M ] | T | Circular, along toroid axis |
B) Formula Table — Forces & Torque
| Situation | Formula | Variables | Dimensional Formula | SI Unit | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Force on moving charge | F = qvB sin | q = charge, v = velocity, = angle between v and B | [M L ] | N | Perpendicular to v; does NO work |
| Force on conductor | F = BIl sin | I = current, l = length in field | [M L ] | N | Direction: F = Il x B |
| Force between parallel wires | F/l = /(2 d) | d = separation | [M ] | N/m | Same direction: attract; opposite: repel |
| Torque on current loop | = NIAB sin = MB sin | M = NIA (magnetic moment) | [M ] | N m | Maximum at = 90 deg |
C) Magnetic Materials Comparison
| Property | Diamagnetic | Paramagnetic | Ferromagnetic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Susceptibility | Small, negative ( < 0) | Small, positive ( > 0) | Very large, positive ( >> 0) |
| Relative permeability | Slightly < 1 | Slightly > 1 | Much >> 1 (up to ) |
| Behavior in external field | Weakly repelled | Weakly attracted | Strongly attracted |
| Examples | Cu, Bi, , diamond | Al, , Na, Mg | Fe, Co, Ni, Gd |
| Temperature effect | Independent of temperature | decreases with T (Curie's law: = C/T) | Becomes paramagnetic above Curie temperature |
| Magnetization direction | Opposite to applied field | Along applied field | Strongly along applied field; retains after removal |
D) Galvanometer Conversions
| Device | Modification | Formula | Resistance Change | Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ammeter | Shunt S in parallel | S = G/(I - ) | Very low ( ~ S << G) | Low (measures large currents) |
| Voltmeter | Series resistance R | R = V/ - G | Very high ( = G + R >> G) | High (draws negligible current) |
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