Biot-Savart non-textbook Equation -- B at point above a loop but off-axis

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the magnetic field (B) at a point above a closed loop of current that is not at the center. Participants express confusion about existing formulas that typically apply to points along the axis of symmetry, questioning their applicability to off-axis points. A graph is shared that illustrates the magnetic field profile as one moves across the loop, indicating that the field strength varies based on position relative to the loop. The conversation also touches on the distinction between vertical and horizontal components of the magnetic field and how to calculate the total magnetic field strength using vector sums. The need for a clear analytic solution for off-axis points remains a key focus of the discussion.
tim9000
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I read everywhere about the formulas for calculating B at a point from a length of straight wire, or at a point from the centre of a closed loop.
But what about at a point over a closed loop that wasn't the centre? Is there a simple calculation for that?

Thanks
 
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Thanks for the reply zoki, I only had a quick look, but didn't those examples still only deal with a point still being on the center (z) axis of the loop? (not like directly over the loop or closer to one side than the other)
I'll have a better look later, in which case if I'm wrong I'll remove this post.
Cheers
 
Attached is a plot of the field of a loop. This graph shows the magnetic field you would expect to measure as you walk across a wire loop resting on the ground surface. The loop is shown as the circle, viewed from above, modeled with many short segments as shown. The horizontal scale is in radii.
The plot drawn across the graph is the field that is seen traveling along a line that passes through the axis, parallel to, but slightly away from the plane of the loop. The plot is normalised so that +Bo is the axial field value.
The steepness of the transition while crossing the wire is determined by the offset from the plane of the coil. Let me know if you find an analytic solution.
B_Field Circular _Loop .png
 
I'm not sure I get it completely (cool graph by the way), I'm really sorry.
So there is a wire loop of current on the ground, I'm walking above it from -2 to +2, passing through the center of the axis of symmetry. I don't see how the yellow graph can be B? All I can picture is current traveling, say, anti-clockwise, then I would have through if the yellow graph was B, that as I approach it and am at -1 it peaks and all the B is coming from the LHS then as I am at the middle, the only component is from the center and there is some cancellation diagonally, then as I leave a gain at 1 it peaks with just RHS magnetic field. So why would it go negative as I first approach it, and leave why would it have a negative gradient? I would have thought it would taper up as I approach, peak, taper down (due to cancellation), taper up, peak, taper down.

Thanks heaps!
 
So I thought it would look like this:
looklike.png
 
Sorry, the graph is the vertical component of the field.

The vertical field inside the loop is opposite that outside the loop.

Over the wire the B field is horizontal so it has no vertical component.
 
Ok that makes sense, but what if you wanted the total B strength, not just a component, over the path from left to right?
Would you sum the components, dot product, or cross product?
Cheers
 
You would compute Bhorizontal and Bvertical, the total is the vector sum, B = √(Bh2 + Bv 2)
 
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Ah of course,
Thank you very much
 
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