Torque due to electromagnetic induction

AI Thread Summary
A circular coil carrying current I experiences torque T due to a magnetic induction B acting perpendicularly to its diameter. The torque is expressed as T = Iπr²Bsinω, where ω is the angle between the coil's normal and the magnetic field. The discussion involves calculating the force on the coil using the equation dF = Idl x B, with emphasis on determining the correct angle θ for the cross product around the circular path. Participants highlight the need to integrate the torque from θ = 0 to π/2 and consider the torque's dependence on the angle ω. The conversation underscores the importance of correctly visualizing the geometry and relationships between the forces and angles involved in the torque calculation.
eas123
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Homework Statement



A circular coil of radius r carries a current I. A magnetic induction B acts at right angles to a diameter of the coil. Show that the current experiences a torque T about the diameter given by T=Iπr^{2}Bsinω, where ω is the angle between the normal to the plane of the coil and the induction B.

Homework Equations



F=∫IdlxB

The Attempt at a Solution



T=Fr/2=Ir/2∫dlxB
Taking the modulus of both sides, T=Ir/2∫Bdlcos(ω)=IrBlcos(ω)/2=Iπr^{2}Bcosω
I suspect the step where I take the modulus of the inside of the integral is wrong, but I'm not sure why.

More generally, I'm unsure how to calculate a cross product such as dlxB around a circle. The modulus of this is Bdlsin(θ), but what is the angle θ?

Thanks in advance for any help! :-)
 
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It's easier if you let ω = π/2 at first. So draw the circular loop in the x-y plane with center at the origin and radius = R. Draw a diameter along the x axis. What direction is the B field in? Call θ the angle between the x-axis and a point on the loop in the 1st quadrant.

Then use d F= I d l x B to get the force on the loop in the direction you're looking for. Remember, they're asking for torque about the diameter, so you're looking for the component of d F = dF in the appropriate direction.

Now you have dF about the diameter as a function of θ. Now, given dF, what is torque d τ about the diameter? Watch out , this is tricky - the torque is about the diameter, not the origin, so don't just use dτ = R * dF.

Then integrate dτ from θ = 0 to π/2 and multiply by 4 since there are 4 quadrants.

Finally, include the effect of ω not being π/2 but any angle 0 < ω < π/2. This is a tilt angle about the diameter.
 
Thanks so much for your help. I'll try the method you suggested now. :thumbup:
 
Hi. I'm trying to use the method above but I'm having some problems.
dT=rcosθdF, and T=4∫dT between 0 and π/2. But I don't know how to write dF as a function of dθ.
How do I use the expression dF=I dl x B to find dF?

Thanks so much!
 
Don't start figuring torque. Start with force.

Did you draw the diagram I suggested? Let's take two points on the loop, one at (R,0) the other at (0,R). What is dl x B as a function of R and dθ for those two locations? Remember, B points in the j direction if you let ω = π/2 for the time being.
 
This is the point I don't understand. Since dl and B are perpendicular, dl x B = B dl, but that's not a function of theta...
 
eas123 said:
This is the point I don't understand. Since dl and B are perpendicular, dl x B = B dl, but that's not a function of theta...

d l and B are not perpendicular at (R,0) which would correspond to θ = 0 if you drew my diagram.
 
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