Induced Emf in Rectangular Loop Problem

AI Thread Summary
To find the current flowing in a rectangular loop being pushed into a magnetic field, the induced electromotive force (emf) can be calculated using the formula emf = vBl, where v is the speed, B is the magnetic field strength, and l is the length of the loop in the direction of motion. The resistance of the loop is given as R = 200Ω. The emf calculated was 0.0064 V, leading to a current of 3.2 x 10^-5 A using Ohm's Law. The discussion highlights the application of Faraday's law to determine the rate of change of area (dA/dt) as wv, where w is the width of the loop. Understanding these principles is crucial for solving similar problems involving induced emf in different loop shapes.
ethanabaker1
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Homework Statement


"You push a rectangular loop of width .2m, length .8 m, and resistance R=200\Omega into a magnetic field (out of page) Bout=.4 T and a speed v=.2 m/s. The long side of the rectangle is parallel to the x axis. What is the current flowing in the loop?"

Homework Equations



I think I should use:
Emf=vBl
Ohm's Law - \DeltaV=IR

The Attempt at a Solution


Using the equation emf=vBl, I did emf=(.02)(.8)(.4)=.0064.
Then I said that emf=\DeltaV, so using Ohm's Law I did \frac{.0064}{200\Omega} and got 3.2 x 10-5 A as my answer.

My problem is that the only problems we've worked are for circular loops and I'm not sure what length to use for l.
 
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ethanabaker1 said:

Homework Statement


"You push a rectangular loop of width .2m, length .8 m, and resistance R=200\Omega into a magnetic field (out of page) Bout=.4 T and a speed v=.2 m/s. The long side of the rectangle is parallel to the x axis. What is the current flowing in the loop?"

Homework Equations



I think I should use:
Emf=vBl
Ohm's Law - \DeltaV=IR

The Attempt at a Solution


Using the equation emf=vBl, I did emf=(.02)(.8)(.4)=.0064.
Then I said that emf=\DeltaV, so using Ohm's Law I did \frac{.0064}{200\Omega} and got 3.2 x 10-5 A as my answer.

My problem is that the only problems we've worked are for circular loops and I'm not sure what length to use for l.
Your equation is derived from Faraday's law. So apply Faraday's law explicitly:

emf = \oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{s} = \frac{d\phi}{dt} = B\frac{dA}{dt}

All you have to do is work out dA/dt, the rate of change of the area enclosed by the loop. If l is the distance along the x-axis through which you have pushed the loop and w is the width of the loop what is dA/dt?

AM
 
How would I do this algebraically?
 
ethanabaker1 said:
How would I do this algebraically?
Since dA = wdx and w is constant, then dA/dt = w(dx/dt) = wv

So emf = Bwv

AM
 
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