24.1 Magnetic Fields and Magnetic Dipoles 1003
b.What is the direction and magnitude of the magnetic field at a location 0.100 m due west of
the wire?If a particle of chargeQis moving with velocityvthrough a magnetic fieldB, there
is a force on the particle given byFQv×B (24.1-4)where×stands for the vector product (cross product) of the two vectors, which
is discussed in Appendix B. There is a screw-thread rule for the cross product. If
the vector on the left is rotated through an angle no greater than 180◦to point in
the direction of the second vector, the cross product points in the direction that a
right-handed screw would move. The force on a positive charge is in this direction.
The force on a negative charge is in the opposite direction.EXAMPLE24.2
If an electron (Q−e− 1. 602 × 10 −^19 C) is located due east of the wire in
Example 24.1 at a distance of 0.050 m from the wire and is moving east at a speed of
145ms−^1 , find the direction and the magnitude of the force on the electron direction.
Solution
From Eq. (B.3-38) in Appendix B and the fact thatvandBare perpendicular to each other,F|F|Q|v×B|Q|v||B|sin(α)Q|v||B|
(− 1. 602 × 10 −^19 C)(145 m s−^1 )(6. 0 × 10 −^5 T)
(− 1. 602 × 10 −^19 C)(145 m s−^1 )(6. 0 × 10 −^5 NsC−^1 m−^1 )
1 .39 Nwhere we have deduced the fact that the tesla unit must be equivalent to N s C−^1 m−^1 ,or
NA−^1 m−^1 ,orkgs−^1 C−^1. The direction of the force is downward by the screw-thread
rule.Exercise 24.2
a.If an electron (Q−e− 1. 602 × 10 −^19 C) is located due east of the wire in Exercise 24.1
at a distance of 0.050 m from the wire and is moving north at a speed of 145 m s−^1 , find the
direction and the magnitude of the force on the electron.
b.If the electron is in the position of part a but is moving directly toward the wire, find the
direction and the magnitude of the force on the electron.Magnetic Dipoles
Magnetic dipoles are like bar magnets or compass needles with a “north-seeking” pole
at one end and a “south-seeking” pole at the other. A magnetic field applies a torque
(turning force) on a magnetic dipole, much as an electric field applies a torque to an
electric dipole. An electric dipole can be made up of a positive and a negative charge