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adrian116
Oct23-06, 03:38 AM
the question is that:
A rectangular loop with width L and a slide wire with mass m are as shown in Fig. A uniform magnetic field \vec B is directed perpendicular to the plane of the loop into the plane of the figure. The slide wire is given an initial speed of v_0 and then released. There is no friction between the slide wire and the loop, and the resistance of the loop is negligiblein comparison to the resistance R of the slide wire. a) Obtain an expression for F, the magnitude of the force exerted on the wire while it is moving at speed v. b). Show that the distance x that the wire moves before coming to rest is \frac{m v_0 R}{a^2 B^2}

i have done part a ,
the ans. is \frac{B^2 L^2 v}{R}
but for part b ,
i can just calculate half of the value of x mentioned in the question.
i did it in this way

subt. F from a to F=ma to find the acceleration
then subt. the ans. to
v^2=u^2+2as by taking v=0 and u=v.
is there any mistake?

OlderDan
Oct23-06, 02:48 PM
the question is that:
A rectangular loop with width L and a slide wire with mass m are as shown in Fig. A uniform magnetic field \vec B is directed perpendicular to the plane of the loop into the plane of the figure. The slide wire is given an initial speed of v_0 and then released. There is no friction between the slide wire and the loop, and the resistance of the loop is negligiblein comparison to the resistance R of the slide wire. a) Obtain an expression for F, the magnitude of the force exerted on the wire while it is moving at speed v. b). Show that the distance x that the wire moves before coming to rest is \frac{m v_0 R}{a^2 B^2}

i have done part a ,
the ans. is \frac{B^2 L^2 v}{R}
but for part b ,
i can just calculate half of the value of x mentioned in the question.
i did it in this way

subt. F from a to F=ma to find the acceleration
then subt. the ans. to
v^2=u^2+2as by taking v=0 and u=v.
is there any mistake?
You have a force that is proportional to the velocity. As the wire slows, the force diminishes. You cannot use the initial acceleration as a constant.

adrian116
Oct24-06, 10:44 AM
then , what should i do , can u give me some hints?

OlderDan
Oct24-06, 10:58 AM
then , what should i do , can u give me some hints?
F = ma = mdv/dt = m(dv/dx)(dx/dt) = mvdv/dx

You can separate variables and integrate.

adrian116
Oct24-06, 11:22 AM
thx so much~