zade70 said:
Yes. I have learned the Right Hand Rule. Actually I am doing some problems that are not from the book I'm studying and I don't know which is appropriate for me to do with the knowledge I have so far.
Ah, that might explain it. Yeah, just using the force formula for parallel wires will not work for perpendicular wires.
The B-field for a current carrying wire looks like this:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/magnetic/magcur.html#c1
And the Lorentz Force is written as the cross product of two vectors:
F = q
v X
B Where
F is the force vector,
v is the velocity vector of a charge, and
B is the magnetic field vector. Vectors have both a Magnitude and a Direction.
The vector cross product can be simplified if you are not familiar with it, so the Lorentz force can be re-written as magnitudes only F = qvB sin(θ), where θ is the angle between the velocity vector
v and the magnetic field vector
B. So the result of the cross product is maximized when
v and
B are in the same (or opposite) direction, and it is zero when they are perpendicular.
Does that help some? You can do more reading about this at Hyperphysics or Wikipedia.
Edit -- not sure why the image is not displaying correctly, but you can click on the link to see it.