New Reply

EM field due to a long wire submitted to an AC current

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Mar22-13, 08:49 AM   #1
 

EM field due to a long wire submitted to an AC current


Hello there,

I am having a real stupid moment.

In the space XYZ, a long wire is along the Y axis and is submitted to an alternating current [itex]I_{0}\sin \omega t[/itex]. I am trying to establish the equations for the B(t) and E(t) fields along the X axis.

I assume that the distance to the cable is small in regard to the cable length and that the cable length is small in regard to the wavelength of the alternating signal, so the cable can be seen as having a uniform current along its length. I am pretty sure the problem will have a cylindrical symmetry.

Besides the "use Maxwell's equations", any hint to attack this problem?

Thanks to all!
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
physics news on PhysOrg.com

>> A quantum simulator for magnetic materials
>> Atomic-scale investigations solve key puzzle of LED efficiency
>> Error sought & found: State-of-the-art measurement technique optimised
Mar22-13, 10:01 AM   #2
mfb
 
Mentor
"use retarded potentials"?

If the distance to the cable is small compared to the wavelength of the alternating signal (if not, the finite cable length is a problem!), you can neglect the time-dependence of the current to get a good approximation.
New Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: EM field due to a long wire submitted to an AC current
Thread Forum Replies
A wire segment 1.2 m long carries a current I = 3.5 A Introductory Physics Homework 7
Finding the B field in a long cylindrical hole in a long wire Classical Physics 1
force, magnetic field, current, long straight wire Advanced Physics Homework 3
B field created by a long straight current carrying wire. Engineering, Comp Sci, & Technology Homework 0
Current, Voltage, Long Wire Classical Physics 6