Determining the Direction of Induced Emf in an Aeroplane's Wing Tips

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the induced emf between the wing tips of an airplane traveling north at 500 km/h with a wing span of 50 m in a vertical magnetic field of 5.5 x 10^-5 T, the formula ε = BvL is applied, resulting in an emf of approximately 0.38194 V. To determine the polarity of the induced emf at the wing tips, the right-hand rule is utilized, which requires knowledge of the directions of both the airplane's velocity and the magnetic field. The force on a unit charge moving through the magnetic field is given by F = q v x B, where the direction of F indicates the charge's movement. If the force directs from the left wing to the right wing, the left wing is negative and the right wing is positive. Understanding these vector directions is essential for determining the emf's sign and direction.
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Homework Statement


An aeroplane in horizontal flight has a wing span of 50 m and is traveling due north at a speed of
500 kmph. Calculate the emf induced between the wing tips of the aeroplane.
The value of the vertical component of the Earth’s magnetic field is 5.5 x 10-5 T.

What additional information would be needed to determine whether the left wing tip was positive
or negative?


Homework Equations


ε = BvL

The Attempt at a Solution



500 kmph = 500,000/3600 = 138.89 ms-1

ε = 5.5 x 10-5 T x 50m x 138.89 ms-1
ε = 0.38194V

I hope that's right? lol

Anyways I'm confused about the second part 'What additional information would be needed to determine whether the left wing tip was positive or negative?'
 
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do you know the right hand rule, used to determine the direction of any induced current (or emf)
 
Yeah, but I don't see how this would help determine if the left wing tip was positive or negative :S
 
Last edited:
kingstar said:
Yeah, but I don't see how this would help determine if the left wing tip was positive or negative :S

Consider a typical conduction electron in the metal of the plane; it's being carried through the magnetic field along with the plane. So, electron moving through magnetic field...
 
you are given the vertical component of the Earth's field...Do you know its direction?
 
To determine emf direction, think of a unit positive charge along the wing. The force on it is F = q v x B so you need to know direction of v and B to determine the direction of F on the charge.

The emf is simply the force on a unit charge times length L, or F*L which is work done on the unit charge. So for example if the force is from left wing to right wing then the left wing is - and the right wing is +. In vector notation, emf = ( v x B ) * L. So L defines the direction (and sign) of the emf. In the above example, L points to the right wing and so emf is +.
 
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