Tutorial Ch21 Solution
Tutorial Ch21 Solution
Chapter 21
At a certain location, the horizontal component of the earth's magnetic field is 2.5 ×
10-5 T, due north. A proton moves eastward with just the right speed, so the magnetic
force on it balances its weight. Find the speed of the proton.
A magnetic field has a magnitude of 0.0012 T, and an electric field has a magnitude
of 4.6 × 103 N/C. Both fields point in the same direction. A positive 1.8-μC charge
moves at a speed of 3.1 × 106 m/s in a direction that is perpendicular to both fields.
Determine the magnitude of the net force that acts on the charge.
q vB q E vB 2 E 2
2 2
F Fmagnetic
2
Felectric
2
q
The drawing shows a parallel plate capacitor that is moving with a speed of 32 m/s
through a 3.6-T magnetic field. The velocity v is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
The electric field within the capacitor has a value of 170 N/C, and each plate has an
area of 7.5 × 10-4 m2. What is the magnitude of the magnetic force exerted on the
positive plate of the capacitor?
SOLUTION
F 0 AE vB
8.85 1012 C2 /(N m 2 ) 7.5 104 m 2 170 N/C 32 m/s 3.6 T
1.3 1010 N
An application of Right-Hand Rule No. 1 shows that the magnetic force is perpendicular
to the plane of the page and directedout of the page , toward the reader.
A 45-m length of wire is stretched horizontally between two vertical posts. The wire
carries a current of 75 A and experiences a magnetic force of 0.15 N. Find the
magnitude of the earth's magnetic field at the location of the wire, assuming the field
makes an angle of 60.0° with respect to the wire.
31. REASONING The magnitude F of the magnetic force experienced by the wire is given by
F ILB sin (Equation 21.3), where I is the current, L is the length of the wire, B is
the magnitude of the earth’s magnetic field, and is the angle between the direction of
the current and the magnetic field. Since all the variables are known except B, we can
use this relation to find its value.
SOLUTION Solving F ILB sin for the magnitude of the magnetic field, we have
F 0.15 N
B 5.1 105 T
I L sin 75 A 45 m sin 60.0
A wire carries a current of 0.66 A. This wire makes an angle of 49° with respect to a
magnetic field of magnitude 4.7 × 10-5 T. The wire experiences a magnetic force of
magnitude 7.1 × 10-5 N. What is the length of the wire?
35. REASONING According to Equation 21.3, the magnetic force has a magnitude of
F = ILB sin , where I is the current, B is the magnitude of the magnetic field, L is the
length of the wire, and = 90 is the angle of the wire with respect to the field.
F 7.1 105 N
L 3.0 m
IB sin 0.66 A 4.7 105 T sin 49
The magnetic field produced by the solenoid in a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
system designed for measurements on whole human bodies has a field strength of
7.00 T, and the current in the solenoid is 2.00 × 102 A. What is the number of turns
per meter of length of the solenoid?
55. REASONING The magnitude B of the magnetic field in the interior of a solenoid
that has a length much greater than its diameter is given by B 0nI (Equation
21.7), where 0 4 107 T m/A is the permeability of free space, n is the
number of turns per meter of the solenoid’s length, and I is the current in the wire
of the solenoid. Since B and I are given, we can solve Equation 21.7 for n.
SOLUTION Solving Equation 21.7 for n, we find that the number of turns per
meter of length is
B 7.0 T
n 2.8 104 turns/m
0 I
4 10 T m/A 2.0 10 A
7 2
Two circular loops of wire, each containing a single turn, have the same radius of 2.8
cm and a common center. The planes of the loops are perpendicular. Each carries a
current of 1.7 A. What is the magnitude of the net magnetic field at the common
center?
SOLUTION Using Equation 21.6 and the Pythagorean theorem, we find that the
magnitude of the net magnetic field at the common center of the two loops is
N 0 I N 0 I N 0 I
2 2
Bnet 2
2R 2R 2R
Two long, straight wires are separated by 0.120 m. The wires carry currents of 8.0 A
in opposite directions, as the drawing indicates. Find the magnitude of the net
magnetic field at the points labeled (a) A and (b) B.
BA = B1 B2 = 4.3 10 5 T
BB = B1 + B2 = 5.3 10 5 T
Two circular coils are concentric and lie in the same plane. The inner coil contains
140 turns of wire, has a radius of 0.015 m, and carries a current of 7.2 A. The outer
coil contains 180 turns and has a radius of 0.023 m. What must be the magnitude of
the current in the outer coil, such that the net magnetic field at the common center of
the two coils is zero?
61. REASONING The magnitude Bi of the magnetic field at the center of the inner coil is
given by Equation 21.6 as Bi 0 Ii Ni / (2Ri ) , where Ii, Ni, and Ri are, respectively,
the current, the number of turns, and the radius of the inner coil. The magnitude Bo of
the magnetic field at the center of the outer coil is Bo 0 Io No / (2Ro ) . In order that
the net magnetic field at the common center of the two coils be zero, the individual
magnetic fields must have the same magnitude, but opposite directions. Equating the
0 I i N i 0 Io No
2 Ri 2 Ro
Solving this expression for the current in the outer coil, we have
Ro 140
Ni turns 0.023 m
I o Ii
7.2 A 8.6 A
No Ri
180 turns 0.015 m
In order that the two magnetic fields have opposite directions, the current in the outer
coil must have an opposite direction to the current in the inner coil.