Potential energy and torque in a magnetic field

AI Thread Summary
In a uniform magnetic field, a coil with its magnetic dipole moment perpendicular experiences maximum torque due to the sine function, while the potential energy is zero at this angle because of the cosine function. This creates a scenario where torque exists without potential energy, leading to the coil's automatic rotation toward alignment with the magnetic field. When aligned, the potential energy reaches its minimum, represented by the negative dot product of the dipole moment and the magnetic field. The torque acts to minimize potential energy by aligning the dipole moment with the magnetic field. Understanding this relationship clarifies the dynamics of magnetic systems.
BrianC12
Messages
18
Reaction score
0
If you have a coil with its magnetic dipole moment perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field, μ × B says that there will be maximum torque since sin90 is 1. But at the same time, -μ dot B gives the potential energy and cos90 is 0. What I don't understand is how you can have torque at this angle, but no potential energy. If you rotate the coil to a perpendicular angle and release it, it'll automatically rotate until the angle is 0. If there were no potential energy wouldn't it just stay in that position?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The zero of potential energy here is not its minimum. When the magnetic field and dipole moment are aligned, you get -\mu \cdot B = -|\mu||B|. The torque is trying to align the dipole moment to this minimum energy configuration.
 
Ahh alright that makes sense, thanks.
 
Thread 'Motional EMF in Faraday disc, co-rotating magnet axial mean flux'
So here is the motional EMF formula. Now I understand the standard Faraday paradox that an axis symmetric field source (like a speaker motor ring magnet) has a magnetic field that is frame invariant under rotation around axis of symmetry. The field is static whether you rotate the magnet or not. So far so good. What puzzles me is this , there is a term average magnetic flux or "azimuthal mean" , this term describes the average magnetic field through the area swept by the rotating Faraday...

Similar threads

Back
Top