superSAIyan2
Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2012
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- HSC
- 2013
Isn't the angle between the conductor and the direction of the magnetic field 90 degrees? The magnetic field is going directly into the page and the conductor lies on the plane of the page.your direction is correct
angle theeta is the angle between the conductor and the external magnetic field.
so I think it'd be safe to say that
F=BIlsin(o)
F=12 x (10 x 10^-3) x 15 x sin(45)
F=1.27 N
true trueIt can't be 45 degrees because that's not theta. As you said yourself, the angle theta is the angle between the conductor (on the plane of the page) and the direction of the magnetic field (directly into the page). This means theta=90 degrees. If you still don't get it, I'll draw a diagram to explain it a bit better.
Yep. Questions like these tend to trick quite a lot of people lolIsn't the angle between the conductor and the direction of the magnetic field 90 degrees? The magnetic field is going directly into the page and the conductor lies on the plane of the page.
ah alright lol i see why i derped
It's probably because it's not taught properly, my own teacher made this same mistake last year when we were learning F=qvBsin(theta) but then I researched it and realised it was wrong. It's funny because he came up with a proof of it thinking theta was the angle between the current and the plane of the page somehow.Yep. Questions like these tend to trick quite a lot of people lol
That's one reason, but i reckon after people learn it, they assume it's simple stuff (it really is) and so whenever they encounter a question like this, they see an angle, current + magnetic field and just blindly apply the formula. I lost a mark in one of my exams for this so i learnt this the hard way lolIt's probably because it's not taught properly, my own teacher made this same mistake last year when we were learning F=qvBsin(theta) but then I researched it and realised it was wrong. It's funny because he came up with a proof of it thinking theta was the angle between the current and the plane of the page somehow.
I'd draw an arrow to point out the direction of the force showing that it's perpendicular to the current but I'm not sure about this.thanks for the replies guys. and am i right in saying the force will be towards the bottom right?
Your diagram it would not be 90 degrees as the conductor and the magnetic field lie in the same plane, both are running into/out of page and across page (this is the x/z plane)Hi guys, I'm still a bit confused, how is it 90 degrees?
For example in my diagram, would it still be 90 degrees? and how?
please define " plane of conductor"
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