The Force on a Current in a Magnetic Field

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the magnetic force acting on a wire carrying a current in a magnetic field defined by its x, y, and z components. The magnetic force formula used is F = ILB sin(theta), where I is the current, L is the length of the wire, and B is the magnetic field strength. Participants highlight the need to compute the resultant magnetic field vector from its components and determine the angle theta between the wire and the magnetic field vector using the dot product. The correct approach involves using the Pythagorean theorem in three dimensions to find the magnitude of the magnetic field vector.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of vector components in three-dimensional space
  • Knowledge of the magnetic force equation F = ILB sin(theta)
  • Familiarity with the dot product of vectors
  • Basic principles of trigonometry, including sine and cosine functions
NEXT STEPS
  • Learn how to calculate the magnitude of a vector from its components
  • Study the dot product and its application in finding angles between vectors
  • Explore the Pythagorean theorem in three dimensions
  • Review examples of magnetic force calculations in different configurations
USEFUL FOR

Students studying electromagnetism, physics educators, and anyone seeking to understand the interaction between electric currents and magnetic fields.

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Homework Statement


The x, y, and z components of a magnetic field are Bx = 0.10 T, By = 0.13 T, and Bz = 0.17 T. A 25 cm wire is oriented along the z axis and carries a current of 4.5 A. What is the magnitude of the magnetic force that acts on this wire?



Homework Equations


F=ILB (sin theta)


The Attempt at a Solution



Well, I have
F= (4.5A)(25e-2 m)(B?) (sin 90)

I don't know which value for B to use or how to incorporate the three values together. I tried using the three B values to find three different force values, but I don't know how to "add" the three together.

This may be totally wrong but when I plugged Bx, By and Bz into the above equation I got
Fx=.01125N
Fy=.01462N and
Fz=.01913N

...but I'm pretty sure this is wrong
Please help
 
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The B values are components of a vector. How do you get the length of a vector from its components? The theta in your equation is the angle between the conductor and the magnetic field and is not 90 degrees. How would you compute it?
 
Well, if I only had x and y values I would use the pythagoreom theorum(sp) to add the two, but I don't know how to add in the third z component.

As for determining theta I'm thinking that it would be -tan y/x
soo -tan .13/.10 = 52.4 degrees
but what about the z axis?
I'm so confused.

The z axis is what is throwing me totally off. I don't know how what to do with it.
 
There's a pythagorean theorem in three dimensions as well. Take the square root of the sum of all of the components squared. Along the z-axis in three dimensions means it's direction vector can be written as (0,0,1). The easy way to find the angle between two vectors is to use the dot product. cos(theta)=a.b/(|a|*|b|). Does that ring a bell?
 
I have the same problem, but with different numbers...

"The x, y, and z components of a magnetic field are Bx = 0.12 T, By = 0.12 T, and Bz = 0.17 T. A 25 cm wire is oriented along the z axis and carries a current of 4.6 A. What is the magnitude of the magnetic force that acts on this wire?"

I can not figure it out with what was discussed in earlier posts
 
Someone please help!

So far I have

F=ILBsintheta

F= (4.6)(25)(.24)sintheta

I can not figure out theta :cry::confused:
 
You have a magnetic field direction of (.12,.12,.17) and the z-axis direction of (0,0,1). Look up the 'dot product'. cos(theta) is related to the dot product of those two vectors and their magnitudes.
 

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