What is the magnetic flux through the loop

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the magnetic flux through a bent square loop in a uniform magnetic field. The magnetic flux formula, Φ = AB cos θ, is applied, with the area calculated as length times width for the square. Participants express confusion regarding the impact of the loop's 90° bend on the area and the angle used in the calculation. Clarifications are provided on how to approach the problem, including the need to consider the orientation of the area vector relative to the magnetic field. The conversation emphasizes understanding the geometry of the bent loop to accurately compute the magnetic flux.
jlmessick88
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Homework Statement


A 10 cm x 10 cm square is bent at a 90° angle . A uniform 0.050 T magnetic field points downward at a 45° angle. What is the magnetic flux through the loop?


Homework Equations



Φ = AB cos θ
Φ = (pi * r^2)B cos θ



The Attempt at a Solution


b = .050 T
cosθ = 45
this is where I'm getting stuck...for A, would i just use length * width (.1m * .1m)
--> .01 * .05 T * cos 45

i'm just unsure of how to approach the problem with the square being bent...
 
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Can you elaborate on what you mean by bent?

Bent in the middle? Or at a 90° angle to the horizon?
 
here's a picture
 

Attachments

any ideas? anyone??
 
your attachment isn't working, but i would assume it is bent in the middle forming a triangle with 2 parts being .05m. find the hypotonuse of that triangle, and use that and the part of the square remaining straight to form a new area. the flux will be parallel to the vector that defines the area, so the cosine will drop out. hope this helps.
 
Image.jpg


i would try using the plane i outlined with red arrows for your area.

Flux= E x dA cos(theta), where cosine is the vector that defines the area of the plane. usually, this vector is normal (perpendicular) to the surface of the plane. when the area vector and the electric field are parallel, the cosine=1 and is the maximum flux that can pass through the plane.
 
so basically that means...
c^2 = a^2 + b^2 = 7
(7*10)(.05)cos(1) = 2.5??
 
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