Deviation of compass in another frame

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of magnetic fields and how they are explained in different frames of reference. It is noted that an observer in a frame where electrons are at rest can explain the magnetic field in another frame where the electrons are moving, by considering the electromagnetic field tensor and the transformation equations. The role of protons and their movement in creating a magnetic field is also mentioned. The conversation also touches on the derivation of the magnetic field of a moving point charge and how it can be explained in different frames. The concept of physical phenomena being explained differently in different frames is also discussed, using the example of the "moving magnet and conductor problem".
  • #1
adelmakram
60
0
Consider an inertial frame where an electric current is flowing in upward direction, a magnetic field is created and its direction is determined by the right hand rule.
In the frame of reference of the electric charges which they are at rest, how can the observer in that frame explains the magnetic field that developed in another frame moving relative to his frame? For example, how can he explain a deviation of a compass in the other frame that is moving relative to him?
 
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  • #2
If the compass is moving past the electrical charges, the compass sees a current in his frame.
 
  • #3
cosmosmike said:
If the compass is moving past the electrical charges, the compass sees a current in his frame.

yes I know. My question, how the observer riding over one of the charge can explain the deviation of the compass?
 
  • #4
The electromagnetic field tensor is the same in both frames (but its coordinates are different, in general, in two different frames).
 
  • #5
adelmakram said:
Consider an inertial frame where an electric current is flowing in upward direction, a magnetic field is created and its direction is determined by the right hand rule.
In the frame of reference of the electric charges which they are at rest, how can the observer in that frame explains the magnetic field that developed in another frame moving relative to his frame? For example, how can he explain a deviation of a compass in the other frame that is moving relative to him?
Here is a good reference for how electromagnetic fields transform between inertial frames.
http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/em/lectures/node123.html

Note, if your wire is uncharged then there is no frame where there is no current. If the electrons are at rest in a frame then the protons are moving. Either way there is a current and therefore a magnetic field.
 
  • #6
DaleSpam said:
Note, if your wire is uncharged then there is no frame where there is no current. If the electrons are at rest in a frame then the protons are moving. Either way there is a current and therefore a magnetic field.

so there is a current seen by an observer moving with electrons because of the protons moving in the opposite direction.

How if there is no protons, in other words, how if an electrons gun is emitting electrons, will be still any magnetic field in the frame where electrons are moving? and how the observer in the rest to the moving electrons can explain the magnetic field B?

Now back to the current again. I read the link of transformation equation and I attached a PDF file of 1 page., so please go through it.

By the way, how to attach a picture directly in the text instead of thumbnail.
 

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  • #7
adelmakram said:
How if there is no protons, in other words, how if an electrons gun is emitting electrons, will be still any magnetic field in the frame where electrons are moving? and how the observer in the rest to the moving electrons can explain the magnetic field B?

A frame in which the electrons are moving has a magnetic field precisely because the electrons are moving. A frame co-moving with the electrons, IE a frame where they are stationary, sees no magnetic field, and instead sees an electric charge from all those electrons.
 
  • #8
Drakkith said:
A frame in which the electrons are moving has a magnetic field precisely because the electrons are moving. A frame co-moving with the electrons, IE a frame where they are stationary, sees no magnetic field, and instead sees an electric charge from all those electrons.

Fine, so how the observer comoving with electrons explain the deviation of a compass in another frame which is moving relative to him?
 
  • #9
Does anyone know where I can find a derivation of the magnetic field of a moving point charge from Ampere's Law? (not the Biot Savart law, but directly from Ampere's law).
 
  • #10
adelmakram said:
Fine, so how the observer comoving with electrons explain the deviation of a compass in another frame which is moving relative to him?

Drakkith already answered this. In that frame the electrons are moving and thus produce a magnetic field so a compass at rest in that frame will be deflected. A compass at rest in the comoving electron frame will not be deflected because there is only an electric field in that case.

cosmosmike said:
Does anyone know where I can find a derivation of the magnetic field of a moving point charge from Ampere's Law? (not the Biot Savart law, but directly from Ampere's law).

You need all of Maxwell's equations to get the magnetic field of a moving point charge because this is not a stationary charge configuration. Ampere's law by itself is not enough.

If the charge is moving at uniform velocity in some inertial frame then there is a much easier way to get its magnetic field in this frame: just take the Coloumb field in the charge's rest frame and Lorentz boost to the original frame, thus Lorentz transforming the Coulomb field and obtaining the electric and magnetic fields of the uniformly moving charge in the original frame.
 
  • #11
WannabeNewton said:
Drakkith already answered this. In that frame the electrons are moving and thus produce a magnetic field so a compass at rest in that frame will be deflected. A compass at rest in the comoving electron frame will not be deflected because there is only an electric field in that case.

Is the physical phenomena explained only in the frame where it happens?
I know that the explanation is sound in the frame of the compass. I am asking about the way an observer riding on the current can explain it?

for example, in the "moving magnet and conductor problem", the same physical phenomena could be explained in both the conductor frame as well as the magnet frame. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_magnet_and_conductor_problem
 
  • #12
adelmakram said:
I am asking about the way an observer riding on the current can explain it?

Yes certainly. What happens to a magnetic dipole moving through a static electric field?
 
  • #13
WannabeNewton said:
Yes certainly. What happens to a magnetic dipole moving through a static electric field?

I don`t know the answer?
 
  • #14
adelmakram said:
so there is a current seen by an observer moving with electrons because of the protons moving in the opposite direction.
Yes.

adelmakram said:
How if there is no protons, in other words, how if an electrons gun is emitting electrons, will be still any magnetic field in the frame where electrons are moving? and how the observer in the rest to the moving electrons can explain the magnetic field B?
This is a physically different scenario from the first. I would strongly recommend staying with one scenario until you understand that one scenario before jumping to another. You have already gotten some good replies, but I think that it is a mistake to pursue it.

adelmakram said:
Now back to the current again. I read the link of transformation equation and I attached a PDF file of 1 page., so please go through it.
Equation 1 is incorrect in general. In general r≠r' and I≠I', and therefore B≠B' despite the fact that the EM field follows Maxwell's equations in both frames.

Equation 2 is correct for this scenario. E=0 because the wire is uncharged in its rest frame in this scenario.
 
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  • #15
adelmakram said:
Is the physical phenomena explained only in the frame where it happens?
There is no such thing as "the frame where it happened". Every physical phenomenon happens in every frame. Different frames are simply different ways to describe the same "happenings". The explanations may be different, but the phenomena are the same.

adelmakram said:
I know that the explanation is sound in the frame of the compass. I am asking about the way an observer riding on the current can explain it?
It is unclear what scenario you are asking about. I really wish you had just stuck with one.

All classical EM scenarios in all frames are explained by Maxwell's equations. The fields can be transformed according to the link I sent, and nearby you can also find links to see how the sources transform. And space and time transform according to the Lorentz transform.
 
  • #16
DaleSpam said:
There is no such thing as "the frame where it happened". Every physical phenomenon happens in every frame. Different frames are simply different ways to describe the same "happenings". The explanations may be different, but the phenomena are the same.

That is fine. So how the observer riding on the current can explain the force acting on the compass which is moving relative to him? What formula described the force affecting a moving magnet dipole n the field of a stationary static electric field?
 
  • #17
DaleSpam said:
Equation 1 is incorrect in general. In general r≠r' and I≠I', and therefore B≠B' despite the fact that the EM field follows Maxwell's equations in both frames.

I understand that r is the perpendicular distance from the wire. So it should not be affected by length contraction.

I for an observer where the compass is at rest depends on Q and t. for an observer co-moving with the charge, he still considers the current moving in the same direction with the same velocity. So the same calculation is still hold for him as in the first observer.
 
  • #18
DaleSpam said:
There is no such thing as "the frame where it happened". Every physical phenomenon happens in every frame. Different frames are simply different ways to describe the same "happenings". The explanations may be different, but the phenomena are the same.

I posted a different post under the name "time to train stop" in the SR and GR forum. The discussion went fine until the last page where I still did not find a reply on a thought experiment I proposed. In that one, the decrease in the length of the train when it stops relative to the train observer may cause different physical phenomena as compared with another observer in the platform. So would you please have a look at it and your kind reply is appreciated.
 
  • #20
WannabeNewton said:
Yes certainly. What happens to a magnetic dipole moving through a static electric field?

So why static then? As long as there will be a current even for the riding observer?
 
  • #21
adelmakram said:
That is fine. So how the observer riding on the current can explain the force acting on the compass which is moving relative to him?
OK, I am not sure which situation you are asking about so I will re-state the one I think you are asking about for clarity. I believe that you are asking about the case where there is an uncharged and current-carrying wire at rest relative to a compass whose needle experiences a restoring force if it deviates from a certain position as analyzed in the frame where the electrons in the wire are at rest.

In the electron's rest frame there is a current from the moving protons which produces a magnetic field. There is also a net charge on the wire due to length contraction which produces an electric field. There is a restoring force on the moving needle due both to the electric field and the magnetic field.

adelmakram said:
What formula described the force affecting a moving magnet dipole n the field of a stationary static electric field?
Maxwell's equations and the Lorentz force, in every frame (assuming no quantum effects are important).
 
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  • #22
adelmakram said:
I understand that r is the perpendicular distance from the wire. So it should not be affected by length contraction.
I was speaking in general. The velocity need not be along the wire. It is best to actually transform the space and time coordinates according to the Lorentz transform since if you simply make assumptions you will get them wrong sometimes.

adelmakram said:
I for an observer where the compass is at rest depends on Q and t. for an observer co-moving with the charge, he still considers the current moving in the same direction with the same velocity. So the same calculation is still hold for him as in the first observer.
Here is how current and charge densities transform in general:
http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/em/lectures/node116.html

For the specific case of an uncharged wire carrying a current density J in the x direction, transforming to a frame moving at velocity v in the x direction gives:

##J'=\gamma J##
##\rho'=-\beta \gamma J/c##

Note that J' is not equal to J in any frame other than the wire's rest frame.
 
  • #23
Does anyone know of a reference that uses only Maxwell's equations to solve the problem of a moving point charge (non relativistically) and the corresponding Magnetic field? I want a solution that does not involve doing a Lorentz transformation. Beginning to think it cannot be done!
 
  • #24
cosmosmike said:
Does anyone know of a reference that uses only Maxwell's equations to solve the problem of a moving point charge (non relativistically) and the corresponding Magnetic field? I want a solution that does not involve doing a Lorentz transformation. Beginning to think it cannot be done!
Why would you think that? Google "Lienard Wiechert", the first 7 links all do not involve a Lorentz transformation. Including Wikipedia.
 
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  • #25
adelmakram said:
So why static then? As long as there will be a current even for the riding observer?

?

Could you please heed DaleSpam's comment and properly explain what your scenario is?

Here's the very simple scenario I'm working with: an infinite sheet of charge moves at uniform velocity relative to a magnetic dipole. The inertial frame of the magnetic dipole is oriented so that the sheet moves along the ##x## axis. Then in this frame there is a uniform magnetic field ##\vec{B}## due to the sheet along the ##z## axis, as well as a simple electric field ##\vec{E}## (c.f. Griffiths section 12.3.2). The magnetic dipole is aligned so as to experience a non-vanishing torque ##\vec{\tau} = \vec{\mu} \times \vec{B}##.

Now your question seems to be: how does an observer at rest with respect to the sheet explain the rotation of the dipole? Well in this frame the sheet is at rest and has the simple electric field ##\vec{E}' = \frac{\sigma}{\epsilon_0}'\hat{y}'## that we all know and love and ##\vec{B}' = 0##. The magnetic dipole now moves through ##\vec{E}'## and thus acquires an electric dipole moment. As a result it experiences a torque from ##\vec{E}'##, the detailed calculations of which you can find in the paper by Griffiths I linked earlier.
 

What is deviation of compass in another frame?

The deviation of compass in another frame refers to the difference in the direction indicated by a compass in two different frames of reference. This is due to the Earth's magnetic field not being perfectly aligned with the geographic north pole.

Why does the compass show deviation in a different frame?

The Earth's magnetic field is not perfectly aligned with the geographic north pole, which means that the direction indicated by a compass will not always match the true north. In different frames of reference, the magnetic field may be at a different angle, resulting in a deviation of the compass.

How can I calculate the deviation of a compass in a different frame?

The deviation of a compass can be calculated by using a mathematical formula that takes into account the difference between the true north and magnetic north, as well as the angle of the magnetic field in the specific frame of reference. This calculation is known as the compass deviation formula.

What factors can affect the deviation of a compass in a different frame?

Several factors can affect the deviation of a compass in a different frame, such as the strength and direction of the Earth's magnetic field, the location of the compass on the Earth's surface, and any nearby magnetic or electrical interference.

How can I correct for the deviation of a compass in a different frame?

To correct for the deviation of a compass in a different frame, you can use a device called a compass corrector or make manual adjustments based on the calculated deviation. Additionally, some modern compasses have built-in correction features that can account for the deviation automatically.

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