Griffiths - example 5.5 Electrodynamics - Calculate B Field

Sparky_
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Homework Statement



Greetings,

In Griffiths, Introduction to Electrodynamics, example 5.5 (page 216), calculating the B field a distance “S” away from a current carrying wire.

l' (dl’) is the horizontal current carry wire – will be segmented to dl’

tan(\theta) = \frac{l’}{s}

In the next step, it is stated

dl’ = \frac{s}{cos^2(\theta)} d(\theta)

I am stuck on this - I do not see how to get from the first equation to the second. Is there an approximation required?

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution



tan(\theta) = \frac{l’}{s}

and
r^2 = l^2 + s^2

l' = s tan(\theta)

I could square both sides

l^2 = s^2 tan^2(\theta)

l^2 = s^2 \frac{sin^2(\theta)}{cos^2(\theta)}

l^2 = (r^2-l^2) \frac{sin^2(\theta)}{cos^2(\theta)}

\frac{l^2}{(r^2-l^2)} = \frac{sin^2(\theta)}{cos^2(\theta)}

sin^2(\theta) - 1 = \frac{sin^2(\theta)}{cos^2(\theta)}

I do not have this in terms of l' anymore.bottom line how does Griffiths get to

dl’ = \frac{s}{cos^2(\theta)} d(\theta)

from

tan(\theta) = \frac{l’}{s}

Thanks for the help

-Sparky_
 
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Sparky_ said:
tan(\theta) = \frac{l’}{s}

In the next step, it is stated

dl’ = \frac{s}{cos^2(\theta)} d(\theta)

It's easy if you recall the formula for the derivative of the tangent function.
 
  • Like
Likes duarthiago
ah crap - chain rule

I was thinking straight algebra type identity or small angle approximation or some such

did not see the forest for the trees

THANKS!
Sparky_
 
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