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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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The constant<br />

is called the permeability of free space, and in a vacuum it has a<br />

value of about N/A 2 .<br />

For <strong>SAT</strong> <strong>II</strong> <strong>Physics</strong>, it’s not important <strong>to</strong> memorize this equation exactly. It’s more<br />

important <strong>to</strong> note that the strength of the magnetic field is proportional <strong>to</strong> the strength of<br />

the current and is weaker the farther it is from the wire.<br />

The direction of the magnetic field lines are determined by an alternate version of the<br />

right-hand rule: if you held the wire with your thumb pointing in the direction of the<br />

current, the magnetic field would make a circular path around the wire, in the direction<br />

that your fingers curl.<br />

EXAMPLE<br />

Two parallel long straight wires carrying a current I stand a distance r apart. What force<br />

does one wire exert on the other?<br />

Consider the magnetic field created by the bot<strong>to</strong>m wire as it affects the <strong>to</strong>p wire.<br />

According <strong>to</strong> the right-hand rule, the magnetic field will point out of the page, and will<br />

have a strength of B = (<br />

I)/(2πr).<br />

The force exerted by the bot<strong>to</strong>m wire on the <strong>to</strong>p wire is F = IlB. If we substitute in for B<br />

the equation we derived above, we find the force per unit length is:<br />

Using the right-hand rule once more, we find that the force pulls the <strong>to</strong>p wire down<br />

<strong>to</strong>ward the bot<strong>to</strong>m wire.<br />

We can apply the same equations <strong>to</strong> find that the <strong>to</strong>p wire pulls the bot<strong>to</strong>m wire up. In<br />

other words, the two wires generate magnetic fields that pull one another <strong>to</strong>ward each<br />

253

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