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Sending current through a wire creates a magnetic field around the wire.
I have a couple questions about the above that I was hoping someone here may know about?
How do we know the magnetic field is traveling a specific direction around the wire (clockwise or counter clockwise viewed from above)?
If it has a direction, it must have a speed, what is the speed?
Does the field (concentric circle) right next to the wire travel at the same speed around the wire as the field located a further distance from the wire?
If the wire is spinning in the same direction as the magnetic field (the power supply and the observer are at rest), will it alter the speed of the field? Will it alter the resistance of the wire? What if the wire spins in the opposite direction?
I can't find any information on the above, any thoughts or links will be appreciated.
Thank you...
QUOTE from HyperPhysics:
The magnetic field lines around a long wire which carries an electric current form concentric circles around the wire. The direction of the magnetic field is perpendicular to the wire and is in the direction the fingers of your right hand would curl if you wrapped them around the wire with your thumb in the direction of the current.
I have a couple questions about the above that I was hoping someone here may know about?
How do we know the magnetic field is traveling a specific direction around the wire (clockwise or counter clockwise viewed from above)?
If it has a direction, it must have a speed, what is the speed?
Does the field (concentric circle) right next to the wire travel at the same speed around the wire as the field located a further distance from the wire?
If the wire is spinning in the same direction as the magnetic field (the power supply and the observer are at rest), will it alter the speed of the field? Will it alter the resistance of the wire? What if the wire spins in the opposite direction?
I can't find any information on the above, any thoughts or links will be appreciated.
Thank you...