General Physics 2 Quarter 3: Week 7 - Module 7: Magnetic Field Vector
General Physics 2 Quarter 3: Week 7 - Module 7: Magnetic Field Vector
General Physics 2
Quarter 3: Week 7 - Module 7
Magnetic Field Vector
STEM GENERAL PHYSICS 2
Grade 11/12 Quarter 3: Week 7 - Module 7: Magnetic Field Vector
First Edition, 2021
Copyright © 2020
La Union Schools Division
Region I
All rights reserved. No part of this module may be reproduced in any form
without written permission from the copyright owners.
Management Team:
A lodestone is a very rare form of the mineral magnetite that occurs naturally
as a permanent magnet. It attracts metallic iron as well as fragments of ordinary
‘inert’ magnetite.
According to a legend, mariners believed that Mountain of Lodestone do exist.
If a ship gets close to it, the mountain would attract the ship due to the iron nails
and bolts used in its construction. The mountain could wreck the ship or pull it
inside. It seems to be similar to Bermuda Triangle in our times because ships that
were lost in the sea and disappeared believed to have been pulled to this mountain.
This is just a legend but it actually introduces us to the concept of magnetic field.
In your previous lesson, you have studied how electric field can be produced
by a charge and how electric fields lead to forces on electric charge. In this lesson,
we will consider how magnetic fields are produced and how it can produce force on
moving charges.
After finishing this Learning Material, you are expected to:
1. Evaluate the magnetic field vector at a given point in space due to a moving
point charge, an infinitesimal current element, or a straight current-carrying
conductor (STEM_GP12EMIIIh-60)
2. Calculate the magnetic field due to one or more straight wire conductors using
the superposition principle (STEM_GP12EMIIIi-62)
3. Calculate the force per unit length on a current carrying wire due to the
magnetic field produced by other current-carrying wires (STEM_GP12EMIIIi-
63)
4. Evaluate the magnetic field vector at any point along the axis of a circular
current loop (STEM_GP12EMIIIi-64)
5. Solve problems involving magnetic fields, forces due to magnetic fields and
the motion of charges and current-carrying wires in contexts such as, but
not limited to, determining the strength of Earth’s magnetic field, mass
spectrometers, and solenoids. (STEM_GP12EMIIIi-66)
Jumpstart
Before moving on, assess how much you know about this topic.
Answer the pretest on the next page in a separate sheet of paper.
I. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Read carefully each item. Write the letter of the best
answer for each item.
N S N S
A. B.
.
D. S N
N S
B.
______3. Which compass is the needle pointing in the direction of the magnetic field
produced by the current flowing through the straight wire?
III. JUSTIFY
Which of the illustrations below is an accurate representation of the magnetic field
of a bar magnet? Explain your answer.
a) b)
Discover
Magnetic Field
An electric field surrounds an electric charge, in the same way, a magnetic
field surrounds a magnet. A magnetic field is a region of space where a magnet is
capable of exerting force on a magnetic material.
Magnetic field is defined in terms of the force exerted on an electric charge
moving in the field. Mathematically it can be expressed as,
𝑭
𝑩=
𝒒𝒗 𝒔𝒊𝒏𝜽
Where: F = force, Newtons (N)
q = charge, Coulombs (C)
v = velocity of the charge, meter/second (m/s)
𝜃 = angle between v and B
B = magnetic field, newton/(coulomb meter/second) or newton/Ampere-
meter, Tesla (T)
A magnetic field also has a direction. The direction of the magnetic field at a
given location can be defined as the direction that the north pole of a compass needle
would point if placed at that location.
Figure 1 Figure 2
Magnetic field is composed of lines of force and these lines point from the
North pole to the South pole. Figure 1 demonstrates how thin iron filings (acting like
tiny magnets) show the magnetic field lines by lining up like the compass needles.
The magnetic field determined in this way for the field surrounding a bar magnet is
shown in Fig. 2, the lines always point out from the north pole and in toward the
south pole of a magnet (the north pole of a magnetic compass needle is attracted to
the south pole of the magnet). Magnetic field lines continue inside a magnet, as
indicated in Fig. 2, thus magnetic field lines always form closed “loops”.
2. The force on a 0.80 m wire that is perpendicular to Earth’s magnetic field is 0.12
N. What is the current in the wire? Use 5 × 10−5 𝑇 for Earth’s magnetic field.
Given:
𝑙 = 0.80 𝑚 𝐵 = 5 × 10−5 𝑇 𝐹 = 0.12 𝑁
Find: 𝐼 =?
Solution:
𝐹 = 𝐼𝑙𝐵
𝐹 0.12 𝑁
𝐼= = −5 = 𝟑. 𝟎 × 𝟏𝟎𝟑 𝑨
𝑙𝐵 (0.80 𝑚)(5 × 10 𝑇)
3. The force acting on a wire that is at right angles to a 0.80-T magnetic field is 3.6
N. The current in the wire is 7.5 A. How long is the wire?
Given:
𝐼 = 7.5 𝐴 𝐵 = 0.80 𝑇 𝐹 = 3.6 𝑁
Find: 𝑙 =?
Solution:
𝐹 = 𝐼𝑙𝐵
𝐹 3.6 𝑁
𝑙= = = 𝟎. 𝟔𝟎 𝒎
𝐵𝐼 (0.80 𝑇)(7.5 𝐴)
Sample problems for Magnetic force on a moving charge
1. What is the force of an electron that moves with a speed of 106 𝑚/𝑠 perpendicular
to a magnetic field of 0.5 T. The charge of an electron is 1.6 × 10−19 𝐶.
Given:
𝑣 = 106 𝑚/𝑠 𝐵 = 0.5 𝑇 𝑞 = 1.6 × 10−19 𝐶
Find: F
Solution:
𝐹 = 𝑞𝑣𝐵
= (1.6 × 10−19 𝐶)(106 𝑚/𝑠)(0.5 𝑇)
= 𝟖 × 𝟏𝟎−𝟏𝟑 𝑵
Using the Right-hand rule, the direction of the force is outwards the paper.
2. A singly ionized particle (𝑞 = 1.60 × 10−19 𝐶) experiences a force of 4.1 × 10−13 𝑁 when
it travels at right angle through a 0.61-T magnetic field. What is the velocity of the
particle?
Given:
𝐹 = 4.1 × 10−13 𝑁 𝐵 = 0.61 𝑇 𝑞 = 1.60 × 10−19 𝐶
Solution:
𝐹 = 𝑞𝑣𝐵
𝐹 4.1 × 10−13 𝑁
𝑣= =
𝑞𝐵 (. 60 × 10−19 𝐶)(0.61 𝑇)
= 𝟒. 𝟐 × 𝟏𝟎𝟖 𝒎/𝒔
Summary of Right- hand Rules (RHR)
General Direction. Solve the following problems systematically. Use another sheet of
paper for your solution.
I. Concept Mapping
Complete the following concept map using the following Right-Hand Rule, F=qvB,
and F=IlB
exerted on a
given by given by
given by
Solve the following problems systematically. Use another sheet of paper for your
solution.
Direction. Select the BEST answer. Write the corresponding CAPITAL LETTER of
your choice in a separate sheet of paper.
S N
S N
C. D.
S N
S N
_____ 2. Why is the magnetic field inside the loop stronger than the magnetic field
outside?
A. The magnetic field lines are concentrated outside the loop
B. The magnetic field lines are concentrated inside the loop
C. The magnetic field lines exist inside the loop
D. The magnetic field lines exist outside the loop
_____ 3. Which direction, in relation to magnetic field line, can produce a zero
magnetic force on a current carrying wire?
A. Parallel B. Helical
C. Perpendicular D. Circular
_____ 4. A wire that is 2.00 m long and carrying a current of 15.0 A is at 90° to a
uniform magnetic field. The force acting on the wire is 0.70 N. What is the
strength of the magnetic field?
A. 0.01 T B. 0.02 T C. 0.03 T D. 0.04 T
_____ 5. A electron passes through a magnetic field at 60° to the field at a velocity of
3.5 × 106 𝑚/𝑠. What is the magnitude of the force acting on the electron having
a 0.45 T magnetic field?
A. 2. 18 × 10−10 𝑁 B. 2. 18 × 10−12 𝑁
C. 2. 18 × 10 −11 𝑁 D. 2. 18 × 10−13 𝑁
II. TRUE or FALSE: Write TRUE if the statement is correct; otherwise, write
FALSE.
_____ 1. The magnetic force that Earth exerts on a compass needle is less than the
force that the compass needle exerts on Earth.
_____ 2. Grasp the wire with your right hand so that your thumb points in the
direction of the magnetic field B; then your fingers will encircle the wire in
the direction of the conventional (positive) current.
_____ 3. Magnetic field exists in a region of space if a moving charge there experiences
a force due to its motion.
_____ 4. The force is at its minimum when the angle is 90° and the particle moves in
a circle.
III. JUSTIFY
How does the strength of magnetic field, 1 cm from a current-carrying wire, compare
with each of the following?
a. the strength of the field that is 3 cm from the wire
b. the strength of the field that is 4 cm from the wire
Jumpstart
I. II.
1. C. 1. FALSE
2. D. 2. TRUE
3. B. 3. FALSE
4. D 4. TRUE
5. C 5. TRUE
III.
A. The lines always point out from the north pole and in toward the south pole of a
magnet (the north pole of a magnetic compass needle is attracted to the south pole
of the magnet).
Explore
Activity 1.
1. a. 0 N. With no current, there is no magnetic field produced by the wire and copper is not a
magnetic material
b. 0.52 N
2. a. 3.2 N, b. 2.26 N, c. 0 N, d. 0 N
Activity 2
1. a. 0.77 T, b. 2.77 × 1016 𝑚/𝑠 2
2. 2 charges
Deepen
I. Concept Map
II. Problem Solving
1. If the wire is parallel to the field, so no force is produced. F= 0 N
2. a. 3 × 10−12 𝑁 b. 3.33 × 1018 𝑚/𝑠 2
Gauge
I. II.
1. A. 1. F
2. B. 2. F
3. A. 3. T
4. B. 4. F
5. D. 5. T
III.
a. Because magnetic field strength varies inversely with the distance from the wire, the
magnetic field at 1 cm will be three times as strong as the magnetic field at 3 cm
b. Because magnetic field strength varies inversely with the distance from the wire, the
magnetic field at 1 cm will be four times as strong as the magnetic field at 3 cm
Answer Key
References
Books:
Giancoli, Douglas C. 2014, Physics Principle with Applications
Glencoe, McGraw Hill. Physics: Principles and Problems
Navaza, Delia C., Valdes, Bienvinido J. 2005. Physics. Quezon City. Phoenix
Publishing House, Inc.
Santos, Gil Nonato C., Ocampo, Jorge P. 2003. e-Physic. Sampaloc, Manila. Rex Book
Store, Inc.