1# Fields 2 3Non-contact forces: 4- strong nuclear force 5- weak nuclear force 6- electromagnetic force 7- - electric fields (dipoles & monopoles) 8- - magnetic fields (dipoles only) 9- gravitational force (monopoles only) 10 11Gravitational & -ve electric monopoles - field lines radiate towards central object 12Magnetic & electric dipoles - field lines go from + to -, or N to S 13 14--- 15 16## Gravity 17 18### Newton's law of universal gravitation 19 20$$F_g=G{{m_1m_2}\over r^2}$$ 21 22where 23$F_g$ is the gravitational force between $m_1$ and $m_2$ 24$G$ is the gravitational constant, $6.67\times 10^{-11} \operatorname{N m^2kg^{-2}}$ 25$r$ is the distance between centre of $m_1$ and $m_2$ 26 27 28- inverse square law 29- acceleration can be calculated from $F_g$, since $F=ma$ 30- all objects with mass attract each other with $F_g$ 31- $F_g$ acts equally on $m_1$ and $m_2$ 32- acceleration of an object close to earth's surface can be approximated by ignoring its mass ($m_2 \approx 0$) 33- apparent weight may be different to gravitational (normal) weight 34 35### Gravitational fields 36 37$$g={F_g \over m}=G{M \over r^2}$$ 38 39where 40$g$ is the gravitational field strength 41$F_g$ is the force due to gravity ($=G{{m_1m_2}\over r^2}$) 42$m$ is the mass of object in the field 43$M$ is the mass of the central body 44 45- arrows towards centre of object 46- closer arrows mean larger force 47- parallel field lines - uniform field strength (vector) 48 49Characteristics of gravitational fields: 50- monopoles 51- attractive force 52- extends to infinite distance, but diminishes with inverse square law 53- charge produced by gravity = $GM$ 54 55### Work in a gravitational field 56 57Gravitational potential energy: $E_g = mg \Delta h$ 58Work: $W = \Delta E_g = Fx$ 59 60Area under force-distance graph = $\Delta E_g$ 61Area under field-distance graph = $\Delta E_g / \operatorname{kg}$ 62 63### Satellites 64 65## Magnetic fields 66 67### Characteristics 68- field lines always go from N -> S 69- dot means out of page, cross means into page 70- ${E_1 \over E_2}={r_1 \over r_2}^2$ 71- flux: change in magnetic field 72 73 74## Electric fields 75 76### Characterisics 77 78- surrounds +ve and -ve charges 79- exerts force on other changes in its field 80- monopoles and dipoles 81- attractive/repulsive forces 82- can be constrained to a fixed distance (conductors / insulators) 83- current flows from +ve to -ve 84 85### Field lines 86- +ve to -ve 87- start and end $\perp$ to surface 88- field lines never cross 89- point charges - radiate from centre 90 91### Forces 92 93$$F=qE$$ 94 95where 96$F$ is the force on charged particle 97$q$ is the charge of object experiencing force (Coulombs) 98$E$ is the strength of the electric field (Newtons / Coloumb or Volts / metre) 99 100### Work in electric fields 101 102$$W=qV$$ 103 104where 105$W$ is the work done on +ve point charge or in field 106$q$ is the charge of point charge being acted on 107$V$ is the potential (voltage) between points 108 109### Coulomb's law 110 111 112$$F=k{{q_1q_2}\over r^2}$$ 113 114where 115$k$ is Coulomb's constant $9.0\times 10^9 \operatorname{N m^2 C^{-2}}$ 116$q_1$ and $q_2$ are the charges on the interacting points 117 118 119### Electric field at distance from a charge 120 121$$E=k{Q \over r^2}$$ 122 123### Lenz's law 124- Right hand grip rule (relationship between directions of $I, F$) 125- Eddy currents counter movement within a field 126- Represented by -ve sign in Faraday's law 127 128### Solenoids 129- Coil around core (like a transformer but field is transferred to kinetic energy) 130 131### Magnetic force on charged particles 132 133$$F=qvB$$ 134 135where 136$v$ is the component of velocity which is $\perp$ to magnetic field 137 138### Right hand slap rule 139 140 141**Field, current and force are all 90 degree to each other** 142<pre> 143force 144| / field 145| / 146|/ 90 de= 147 \ 148 \ +ve charge 149</pre> 150 151Force is given by $F=nBIl$ 152 153 154### Faraday's law of induction 155 156$$\epsilon = -N{{\Delta \Phi_B}\over{\Delta t}}$$ 157 158where 159$\epsilon$ is induced EMF (voltage) 160$N$ is the number of turns in the primary coil 161$\Phi_B$ is the magnetic flux (Wb or V / s) 162$\Delta t$ is the change in time for one cycle (can be derived from period or frequency) 163 164### Flux through coils 165$$\Phi_B = B_{\perp}A$$ 166 167where 168$B_\perp$ is the field strength (Tesla) 169$A$ is the area of the field perpendicular to field lines 170 171if $B {\not \perp} A, \Phi_B \rightarrow 0$ 172if $B \parallel A, \Phi_B = 0$ 173 174- flux-time graphs ($t$ on $x$-axis): $\operatorname{gradient} \times n = \operatorname{emf}$ 175 176 177**EMF is proportionate to change in flux** 178 179**Induced EMF opposes (counters) change in flux** 180 181### Transformer equation 182 183$${V_p \over V_s}={N_p \over N_s}$$ 184$${I_p \over I_s}={N_s \over N_p}$$ 185 186- core strengthens and "focuses" ac flux $\Phi$ through secondary coil 187 188 189### Root mean square 190 191$$V_{\operatorname{rms}} = {V_{\operatorname{p\rightarrow p}} \over \sqrt{2}}$$ 192 193## Power transmission 194-240 V / 50 Hz in Australia 195- higher voltages have lower $V_{\operatorname{loss}}$ 196- ac is used because its voltage is easily changed with xfmrs 197 198### Safety 199- $\ge 30 \operatorname{mA}$ through heart is dangerous 200 201### Transmission $P_{\operatorname{loss}}$ 202 203$$P_{\operatorname{loss}} = \Delta V I = I^2 R = {{\Delta V^2} \over R}$$ 204 205where 206$R$ is the total resistance (derived from resistance per distance) 207 208To reduce power loss, use lower resistance (thicker) wires or increase voltage / reduce current with transformers 209 210 211 212### Motors 213 214#### DC 215 216- current-carrying wire experiences magnetic force $F$ equal to $nBIl$ 217- torque: $\tau = r_{\perp} F$ 218- split ring and brushes