What current is needed for an equilateral triangle formation with three wires?

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To determine the current needed for the upper wire to "float" and form an equilateral triangle with the lower wires, the forces acting on the upper wire must balance its weight. The forces from the lower wires repel the upper wire, and the gravitational force is given by mg. The correct calculation involves using the sine of 60 degrees for the angle of the forces, rather than 30 degrees, which was initially used. This adjustment leads to the correct current calculation, which is crucial for the problem's solution. The final current required is approximately 319A, but the angle adjustment is essential for accuracy.
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Homework Statement



The figure is a cross section through three long wires with linear mass density 52.0g/m. They each carry equal currents in the directions shown. The lower two wires are 4.0 cm apart and are attached to a table. (please see attachment) Just in case attachment is not working (top wire is going out of page and above lower wires, which are going into the page.) What current will allow the upper wire to "float" so as to form an equilateral triangle with the lower wires?

View attachment 3 wires.doc


Homework Equations



F=uLI^2/(2pid)

F=mg

(please see attached for better format for equations)

ATTACH]13181[/ATTACH]

The Attempt at a Solution



since current in lower wires are in opposite direction from top wires, therefore they repel each other. The y-components from each lower two wires must equal force of gravity of top wire:

mg = 2 x uLI^2/(2pid)sin30
solve for I, assume L=1 m and where d=0.04m, mg=0.5096N
I=319A...but why is this not the right answer?
 

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dongeto said:
The y-components from each lower two wires must equal force of gravity of top wire:

mg = 2 x uLI^2/(2pid)
Looks like you forgot to take the y-component of the magnetic forces.
 
oh sorry...I forgot to put sin 30 in the equation but i still got 319A

I= sqrt [(0.5096*pi*0.04)/((4pi*10^-7)*sin 30)]=319A
 
I get the same answer. Who says it's wrong?
 
i entered that answer in mastering physics and its incorrect
 
can someone please help...this is due tmr...thanks
 
The angle of each force with the horizontal is 60 degrees, not 30; so you should use sin(60). (D'oh! I made the same error.)
 
k...i get it...thank you very much Doc Al!
 
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