What Is the Magnetic Field at the Axis of a Circular Loop?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the magnetic field at the axis of a circular loop with a radius of 0.1 m and a current of 2.0 A. The correct magnetic field strength at the observation point (0, 0, 0.1 m) is identified as 4.443 × 10-6 T in the +z direction. Participants suggest using the Biot-Savart Law instead of Ampere's Law for this scenario. They discuss the contributions of horizontal components of the magnetic field and their effects on the total field at the observation point. The conversation emphasizes understanding the direction of the magnetic field and how it circulates around the loop.
syhpui2
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Homework Statement



As shown in the figure below, a circular loop of radius a = 0.1 m lies in the horizontal x-y plane with its center located at the origin, with steady current I = 2.0 A circulating in a counter-clockwise direction in the loop. The magnetic field strength B(0,0,z) at the observation point (x, y, z) = (0, 0, 0.1 m) and its direction, due to the current I flowing in the circular loop is:
(a) B(0,0,z=0.1m) = 0.628 × 10-7 T, -z direction
(b) B(0,0,z=0.1m) = 2.323 × 10-6 T, +z direction
(c) B(0,0,z=0.1m) = 3.678 × 10-6 T, -z direction
(d) B(0,0,z=0.1m) = 4.443 × 10-6 T, +z direction

Answer is D

http://i.imgur.com/i6Zxf.png

i6Zxf.png


Homework Equations



Ampere's Law

The Attempt at a Solution



I tried Ampere's law, but I am not sure what is B dot dl (especially angle) and what is the path in this case...

Thx
 
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I believe you want the Biot-Savart Law, since we are dealing with a current loop, rather than a current-carrying straight wire.

At any point on the loop, which way does the magnetic field circulate? At the observation point, what is going to happen to the "horizontal components" (the parts parallel to the xy-plane) of all the bits of magnetic field coming from the loop? What will that mean as far as how the bits of magnetic field add up at ( 0, 0, 0.1 m.)?
 
dynamicsolo said:
I believe you want the Biot-Savart Law, since we are dealing with a current loop, rather than a current-carrying straight wire.

At any point on the loop, which way does the magnetic field circulate? At the observation point, what is going to happen to the "horizontal components" (the parts parallel to the xy-plane) of all the bits of magnetic field coming from the loop? What will that mean as far as how the bits of magnetic field add up at ( 0, 0, 0.1 m.)?

At any point on the loop, which way does the magnetic field circulate?

Up, by RHR



At the observation point, what is going to happen to the "horizontal components" (the parts parallel to the xy-plane) of all the bits of magnetic field coming from the loop?

Bcos(45)?

What will that mean as far as how the bits of magnetic field add up at ( 0, 0, 0.1 m.)?


integral Bcos(45)dl?
 
syhpui2 said:
Thanks. But there is an angle in this case...

If you scroll down the page you arrive at the title "Magnetic field on the axis".

ehild
 
ehild said:
If you scroll down the page you arrive at the title "Magnetic field on the axis".

ehild

Okay. Thanks
 
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