Sounds like quite a few people used centimeters rather than meters for the distance...
Were you supposed to halve the current? Since the force is only acting on one of the wires rather than both, isnt the current needed half of 220...?
Even if I messed that bit up, I found this one of the easier questions to be honest because it was mathematical rather than 'assess the contribution to scientific thinking...'
Dumsum said:
by rama_v said:
Yep I got 221 amps, I did the calculation twice because I thouight hang on, this is extremely high considering its from a battery lol
But it seems thats the correct answer.
Just goes to show a battery would never actually cause the tube to jump
Bullshit. Most modern car batteries can supply more than 1kA when cold, although its not great for them. Since the parameters needed a high current to move the tube, a car battery was a good choice to supply it.