How Is the Magnetic Field Calculated Near a Current-Carrying Wire?

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the magnetic field 4.2 cm from a straight wire carrying a current of 42 A, the relevant formula is B = mu_0*I/(2*pi*r), where r is the distance from the wire. Since 4.2 cm is greater than the radius of the solenoid (3.3 cm), the point is outside the solenoid, and thus the magnetic field is solely due to the current in the wire. The calculation yields a magnetic field strength of 0.20 mT. The magnetic field inside the solenoid is not applicable in this case, as the field outside the solenoid is considered to be zero. The final conclusion is that the magnetic field at the specified distance is determined only by the straight current-carrying wire.
SimonZ
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Homework Statement


A straight wire carrying a current of 42 A lies along the axis of a 6.6 cm-diameter solenoid. The solenoid is 70 cm long and has 250 turns carrying a current of 6.0 A.
Estimate the magnitude of the magnetic field 4.2 cm from the wire.


Homework Equations


magnetic field due to a straight current I
B = mu_0*I/(2*pi*r)


The Attempt at a Solution


Note 4.2 cm > radius 3.3 cm, so the point is outside the solenoid, the magnetic field is only due to the straight current
use I = 42 A, r = 4.2 cm, get B = 0.20 mT
Anything wrong?
 
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SimonZ said:
Note 4.2 cm > radius 3.3 cm, so the point is outside the solenoid, the magnetic field is only due to the straight current
use I = 42 A, r = 4.2 cm, get B = 0.20 mT
Anything wrong?


SimonZ said:
The solenoid is 70 cm long and has 250 turns carrying a current of 6.0 A.

The solenoid carries a current, so it has a magnetic field. For a solenoid

B=\mu_0nI \ where \ n=\frac{No. \ of \ turns}{Length \ of \ solenoid}


So you'd need to find the resultant mag. field of the solenoid and the straight conductor.
 
B = μo(N/l) * I = μonI
is only valid for magnetic field INSIDE the solenoid.
The field OUTSIDE the solenoid is zero.
So the field is only due to the straight current
 
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