Learning Objectives for This Lesson
By the end, you will:
- Describe magnetic field sources and lines
- Draw and interpret magnetic field line diagrams
- Apply the right-hand rule for force direction
- Calculate force on a moving charge:
- Calculate force on a current-carrying wire:
Iron Filings Reveal the Field
Magnetic field lines appear wherever iron filings align.
Magnetic Field B — The Basics
is a vector field — magnitude and direction at every point in space- SI unit: tesla (T) = kg/(A·s²)
- Reference values:
- Earth's field:
T - Strong bar magnet:
T - MRI machine: 1–3 T
- Earth's field:
Sources of Magnetic Fields Explained
- Permanent magnets: aligned electron spins in magnetic domains
- Moving charges / current: any moving charge creates a B field around it
- Earth's core: liquid iron dynamo → geomagnetic field
- No magnetic monopoles: field lines always form closed loops
Rules for Drawing Magnetic Field Lines
- Lines emerge from north pole, enter south pole (externally)
- Inside the magnet: lines run from south to north (closed loops)
- Direction of
is tangent to the field line at each point - Density of lines indicates field strength — dense = strong
- Lines never cross
Field Line Diagrams: Bar Magnet and Wire
Bar magnet: curved loops from N to S · Wire: circular rings wrapping around the wire
The Solenoid as an Electromagnet
- A solenoid (coil of wire with current) produces a uniform field inside
- Outside, field lines resemble a bar magnet
- Solenoid strength controlled by: current magnitude, number of turns, core material
Quick Check: Describe the Magnetic Field
Look at a bar magnet field line diagram.
- Where is the field strongest?
- In which direction does B point at the north pole's face?
- Do field lines ever cross?
Magnetic Force on a Charge:
= charge (C), = speed (m/s), = field (T), = angle between and (parallel to B) → , no force (perpendicular to B) → (maximum)
Force Right-Hand Rule (Force RHR)
For a positive charge:
- Point fingers in the direction of
(velocity) - Curl fingers toward
(field direction) - Thumb points in the direction of
(force)
For a negative charge: reverse the result (force is opposite).
Force RHR versus Field RHR Compared
| Rule | Setup | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Field RHR | Thumb along current |
Fingers curl in direction of |
| Force RHR | Fingers along |
Thumb points in direction of |
Two different right-hand rules — keep setups separate.
Magnetic Force Does No Work
- Magnetic force is always perpendicular to
- Work =
; force velocity means →
→ Magnetic force changes direction, not speed
Circular Motion in a Uniform Field
- Force always
velocity → force always points toward center - Result: uniform circular motion at constant speed
Worked Example: Force on a Moving Charge
Given:
Worked Example: Finding Force Direction
Force RHR (positive charge):
- Fingers East (along
) - Curl upward (toward
) - Thumb points South
→ Force on positive charge is directed South.
Quick Check: Predict the Force Direction
A negative charge moves East.
What direction is the force?
Apply Force RHR for positive charge, then reverse for negative.
Force on a Current-Carrying Wire:
= field (T), = current (A), = wire length (m), = angle to- Force RHR: fingers along
, curl toward , thumb = - Wire = stream of moving charges; summing
over length gives
Worked Example: Force on a Wire
Given:
Direction: Apply Force RHR with fingers along
The Motor Principle: Torque from Force
Forces on opposite sides of a current loop point in opposite directions → torque → rotation
Quick Check: Calculate Force on Wire
A horizontal wire carries current to the right.
What direction is the magnetic force on the wire?
Apply the Force RHR: fingers along current (right), curl toward B (up), thumb = ?
Practice: Mixed Magnetic Force Problems
- Proton:
C, m/s, T, - Wire:
m, A, T, - Same proton, now parallel to
Key Takeaways: Magnetic Fields and Forces
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Watch Out: Avoid These Three Errors
E and B fields differ — E acts on static charges; B only acts on moving charges.
Magnetic force never does work — it changes direction, not speed.
Two right-hand rules exist — one for field direction, one for force. Keep them separate.
What Comes Next: Electromagnetic Induction
sec-20-2: Electromagnetic Induction
- What happens when the magnetic field through a loop changes?
- Faraday's Law:
- Lenz's Law: induced current opposes the change
- The foundation of every generator and transformer
Magnetism creates electricity — the most important discovery of the 19th century.