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CLAIMED BY JULIANNE OLIVER SPRING 2016
CLAIMED BY Alexander Arredondo Fall 2023
[[File:Knight2_33.f.14.png|400px|thumb|right|Magnetic field of a current carrying wire, a visual of a derivation of the Biot-Savart Law for currents. [http://www4.uwsp.edu/physastr/kmenning/Phys250/Lect19.html]]]The Biot-Savart (pronounced bee-yo sahv-ar) Law is an equation that describes the quantitative relationship between a moving point charge and the magnetic field it generates. This law is seen as a magnetic equivalent of Coulomb's Law[http://dev.physicslab.org/document.aspx?doctype=3&filename=magnetism_biotsavartlaw.xml], and states that the magnetic field decreases with the square of a distance from a point charge. This law is consistent with Ampere's Law and Gauss's Law for magnetism. It is so named for Jean-Baptiste Biot and Felix Savart who discovered the law in 1820.
 
CLAIMED BY Olivia Wang Fall 2023
[[File:Knight2_33.f.14.png|400px|thumb|right|A Visual of the Magnetic Field of a Current-Carrying Wire. [http://www4.uwsp.edu/physastr/kmenning/Phys250/Lect19.html]]]The Biot-Savart (pronounced bee-yo sahv-ar) Law quantitatively describes the magnetic field produced by a moving point charge. This law can be viewed as the magnetic counterpart of Coulomb's Law, which quantitatively describes the electric field produced by a point charge. [http://dev.physicslab.org/document.aspx?doctype=3&filename=magnetism_biotsavartlaw.xml] The law is named after Jean-Baptiste Biot and Felix Savart, the two scientists who discovered the law in 1820.


==The Main Idea==
==The Main Idea==


A moving point charge can create a magnetic field. In addition to the electric fields created by point charges, magnetic fields are another field that a point charge can create. In contrast to an electric field, a point charge ''must'' have some velocity in order to create a magnetic field.  
A moving point charge produces a magnetic field in addition to its intrinsic electric field. As opposed to an electric field, which eminates outward in all directions, the magnetic field of a point charge will curl around the point charge.  


The Biot-Savart Law relates magnetic fields to the currents which are their sources. In a similar manner, Coulomb's law relates electric fields to the point charges which are their sources. Finding the magnetic field resulting from a current distribution involves the vector product, and is inherently a calculus problem when the distance from the current to the field point is continuously changing. The relationship between the magnetic field contribution and its source current element is called the Biot-Savart law.
The direction of the magnetic field contribution follows the right hand rule illustrated for a straight wire. This direction arises from the vector product nature of the dependence upon electric current.


===A Mathematical Model===
===A Mathematical Model===


The general formula for a single charge is <math>\vec B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{q\vec v\times\hat r}{r^2} </math> where <math> \mu_0 </math> is the constant <math> 1e-7 \frac{tesla * m^2}{coloumb * \frac{m}{s}} </math> exactly. <math> \vec v </math> is the velocity of the point charge <math> q </math>, and <math> \hat r </math> is the unit vector pointing from the source location towards the observation location ('''remember''' <math> r= r(obs)-r(source) </math>)
The single moving point charge form of the Biot-Savart Law is <math>\vec B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{q\vec v \times \hat r}{r^2} </math>. The permeability of free space, or the ease of producing a magnetic field in a vacuum, is a constant <math> 4\pi \times 10^{-7} \frac{T * m^2}{C * \frac{m}{s}} </math>, denoted <math> \mu_0 </math>. The above equation describes the magnetic field vector <math> \vec B </math> at a point <math> \hat r </math> away from the moving point charge with velocity <math> \vec v </math> and charge <math> q </math>. '''Remember''' that <math> \vec r = \vec r_{obs} - \vec r_{source} </math>. '''Note:''' The charge <math> q </math> retains its sign in the Biot-Savart Law. For an electron, <math> q </math> in the Biot-Savart Law  would be equal to <math> -1.6 \times 10^{-19} C </math>.
 
The short wire form of the Biot-Savart Law is <math>\vec B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{I \Delta\vec l \times \hat r}{r^2} </math>. This equation describes the magnetic field vector <math> \vec B </math> at a point <math> \hat r </math> away from the short wire with length <math> \Delta\vec l </math> and current <math> I </math>.
 
 
'''Direction of the Magnetic Field Vector:'''
The direction of the magnetic field vector is different from the direction of the electric field vector. The direction of the magnetic field vector is given by the cross product of two distinct vectors: namely either <math> \vec v </math> or <math> \Delta\vec l </math> and <math> \hat r </math>. The cross product of two vectors is perpendicular to the two original vectors.
 
Example: Find the direction of the magnetic field of a point charge moving in the <math> +x </math> direction at a point in the <math> -y </math> direction.


'''Direction of Magnetic Field'''
Direction of <math> \vec B = \hat v \times \hat r = <1, 0, 0> \times <0, -1, 0> = \begin{bmatrix}\hat x & \hat y & \hat z \\ 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix} = <0, 0, -1> </math>, or in the <math> -z </math> direction
The direction of the magnetic field is not as simple as the direction of an electric field. The magnetic field's direction is given by crossing the velocity vector with the <math> \hat r </math> vector. The product of crossing two vectors is '''always''' a vector!


'''Magnitude of Magnetic Field'''
You can also calculate the cross product, using formula <math> \vec A\times\vec B =  < A_yB_z - A_zB_y, A_zB_x - A_xB_z, A_xB_y-A_yB_z> </math>
The magnitude of the magnetic field is given by <math> B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{qv sin(\theta)}{r^2} </math>
 
'''Magnitude of Magnetic Field Vector:'''
The magnitude of the magnetic field vector for a single moving point charge is given by <math> B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac{q v \sin\theta}{r^2} </math>, where <math> q v \sin\theta </math> is the polar form of the cross product and <math> \theta </math> is the angle between the two vectors <math> \vec v </math> and <math> \hat r </math>.
 
The magnitude of the magnetic field vector for a short wire is given by <math> B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac{I \Delta l \sin\theta}{r^2} </math>, where <math> I \Delta l \sin\theta </math> is the polar form of the cross product and <math> \theta </math> is the angle between the two vectors <math> \Delta\vec l </math> and <math> \hat r </math>.


===A Computational Model===
===A Computational Model===
Check out this link: https://trinket.io/glowscript/93785debae for a look at a moving point charge acted on by a magnetic force. This magnetic force acts on the point charge since the point charge is ''moving'' with a certain velocity. Magnetic force goes hand-in-hand with magnetic field. Just as a point charge can only create a magnetic field if the point charge is moving, a point charge can only feel the force from a magnetic field if the point charge has a velocity. This computational model shows how a moving point charge, which creates its own magnetic field, is acted on by an external magnetic field.


For a computational model of a wire carrying current, see the wiki page on the Biot-Savart Law for Currents [[http://www.physicsbook.gatech.edu/Biot-Savart_Law_for_Currents]].
For a computational model of a wire carrying current, see the wiki page on the Biot-Savart Law for Currents [http://www.physicsbook.gatech.edu/Biot-Savart_Law_for_Currents].
 
===Using the Right-Hand Rule for Biot-Savart Law===
 
Put your index finger in the direction of the velocity of the particle, and your middle finger out towards the r hat. Make sure these two are 90 degrees away from each other. Now, stick your thumb up. If the particle you are following is positive, the cross product of the velocity of the particle and the r hat is in the direction of your thumb. If the particle is negative, the cross product of the particle and the r hat is in the opposite direction of your thumb.
 
[[File:20190414 183245.jpg|center|300px]]
 
===Solving Biot-Savart Problem strategy===
To solve Biot-Savart law problem, the following steps are helpful:
 
1. Identify that the Biot-Savart law is the chosen method to solve the given problem. If there is symmetry in the problem comparing  𝐁⃗ and  𝐝𝐥⃗ ,Ampère’s law may be the preferred method to solve the question, which will be discussed in Ampère’s Law.
 
2. Draw the current element length  𝑑𝐥⃗ and the unit vector  𝐫ˆ, noting that  𝑑𝐥⃗ points in the direction of the current and 𝐫ˆ points from the current element toward the point where the field is desired.
 
3. Calculate the cross product  𝑑𝐥⃗ ×𝐫ˆ. The resultant vector gives the direction of the magnetic field according to the Biot-Savart law.
 
4. Use Equation and substitute all given quantities into the expression to solve for the magnetic field. Note all variables that remain constant over the entire length of the wire may be factored out of the integration.
 
5. Use the right-hand rule to verify the direction of the magnetic field produced from the current or to write down the direction of the magnetic field if only the magnitude was solved for in the previous part.


==Examples==
==Examples==
'''See below for solutions to these examples.'''


===Example 1===
===Example 1===
An electron located at the origin is moving at <math> 2e8 </math> m/s in the +x direction. What is the magnetic field at <math> <200, -300, 0> </math> m?
An electron located at the origin is moving at <math> 2 \times 10^8 \frac{m}{s}</math> in the <math> +x </math> direction. What is the magnetic field at <math> <200, -300, 0> m </math> due to the moving electron?


===Example 2===
A proton is located on the <math> +x </math> axis and is moving with a velocity <math> \vec v </math> in the <math> -y </math> direction. What is the magnitude of the magnetic field due to the moving proton at <math> <0, 0, z> </math> if the angle <math> \theta </math> between <math> \vec v </math> of the proton and <math> \hat r </math> equals <math> 34° </math>?


===Example 2===
===Example 3===
A proton is located on the +x axis and is moving at a speed <math> \vec v </math> in the -y direction. What is the magnitude of the magnetic field at <math> <0, 0, z> </math> at <math> \theta = 34 </math> degrees?
An electron located at the origin is moving with velocity <math> \vec v_{electron} </math> in the <math> +z </math> direction. A proton is located directly in front of the electron and is moving with a velocity <math> \vec v_{proton} </math> in the <math> -y </math> direction. What is the magnetic field at the location of the proton due to the moving electron?
 
===Example 4===
A thin plastic disk with radius <math> 500 cm </math> and negative charge <math> -6 \times 10^{-7} C </math> centered at the origin located in the <math> y-z </math> plane is rotating with a period of <math> 7 s </math> clockwise when viewed from the negative x axis. Determine the magnetic field at <math> \vec d = <-50000, 0, 0> cm. </math>


===Answers===


===Example 3===
'''Example 1:'''
An electron located at the origin is moving with velocity <math> \vec velectron </math> in the +z direction. A proton is located directly in front of the electron and is moving with a velocity <math> \vec vproton </math> in the -y direction. What is the magnetic field at the location of the proton?


===Answers to Examples===
[[File:ex1.JPG|center|300px|Example 1]]


'''Example 1:'''First, we need to find <math> \vec r </math>, which in this case is just <math> \vec r = <200, -300, 0> </math> m. From that, we can calculate <math> \hat r </math>:
First, calculate <math> \vec r </math>, which is <math> \vec r = <200, -300, 0>-<0,0,0>=<200, -300, 0> m </math>. Using <math> \vec r </math>, calculate <math> \hat r </math>:
<math> \hat r = \frac{ <200, -300, 0> }{\sqrt {200^2 + -300^2}}= <0.554, -0.832, 0> </math>
<math> \hat r = \frac{ <200, -300, 0> }{\sqrt {200^2 + -300^2}}= <0.554, -0.832, 0> </math>


Next, we need to calculate <math> q \vec v </math>. Since we're dealing with an electron, our charge will be negative: <math> -1.6e-19* <2e8, 0, 0> = <-3.2e-11, 0, 0> </math>.
Next, calculate <math> q \vec v </math>. Remember that an electron carries a negative charge: <math> -1.6 \times 10^{-19}* <2 \times 10^8, 0, 0> = <-3.2 \times 10^{-11}, 0, 0> </math>.
Now for the cross product, <math> q\vec v\times\hat r </math>. The cross product is given as <math> \vec A\times\vec B =  < AxBz - AzBy, AzBx - AxBz, AxBy-AyBz> </math>, or by computing the determinant. The cross product in this case is <math> <0, 0, 2.65e-11> </math>.  
Next, compute the cross product, <math> q\vec v\times\hat r </math>. The cross product is given as <math> \vec A\times\vec B =  < A_xB_z - A_zB_y, A_zB_x - A_xB_z, A_xB_y-A_yB_z> </math> or by computing the determinant of the two vectors in a 3 x 3 matrix. The cross product in this case is <math> <0, 0, 2.65 \times 10^{-11}> </math>.  


Finally, we can divide by the magnitude of <math> \vec r </math> squared: <math> \frac{ <0, 0, 2.65e-11> }{360.55} = <0, 0, 7.34e-14> </math>. Multiply by the constant <math> 1e-7 </math> given in the formula and our final answer is <math> \vec B = <0, 0, 7.34e-21> Teslas </math>
Finally, divide <math> q\vec v\times\hat r </math> by the magnitude of <math> \vec r </math> squared: <math> \frac{ <0, 0, 2.65 \times 10^{-11}> }{360.55} = <0, 0, 7.34 \times 10^{-14}> </math>. Multiply by the constant <math> 1 \times 10^{-7} </math> given in the formula, and the final answer is <math> \vec B = <0, 0, 7.34 \times 10^{-21}> T </math>


'''Example 2:'''  
'''Example 2:'''  


[[File:ex2.JPG|left|300px|Example 2]]
[[File:ex2.JPG|center|300px|Example 2]]
 
First, as in example one, calculate <math> \vec r </math>, and then the magnitude of <math>\vec r </math>. <math> \vec r = <0, 0, z> - < x, 0, 0> = <-x, 0, z> </math>. The magnitude of <math>\vec r </math> is then <math> \sqrt{x^2 + z^2} </math>.
We can then multiply the magnitudes of <math> q,\vec v, </math> and <math> sin </math> (<math>\theta </math>) to get the final answer:
 
<math> B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{qvsin(34°)}{(\sqrt{x^2 + z^2})^2} </math>
 
'''Example 3:'''
 
[[File:ex3.JPG|center|300px|Example 3]]
 
As seen in the diagram, <math> \hat r </math> from the proton to the electron is parallel to the electron's velocity. Therefore, <math> \vec v_{electron}\times\hat r </math> is zero because the two vectors are parallel (<math> \theta=0 </math>°).
 
'''Example 4:'''


[[File:Ex4.jpg|center|300px|Example 4]]


To find the overall magnetic field vector at <math> \vec d </math>, the disk must be broken down into many infinitesimally small rings.


Step 1: Find <math> dQ </math>, the amount of charge for an infinitesimal ring


<math> \frac{dQ}{2\pi r dr} = \frac{Q}{\pi R^2} </math>


<math> dQ = \frac{-6 \times 10^{-7}}{5^2\pi} 2\pi r dr = \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{25} </math>


Step 2: Find <math> dI </math>, the current in this infinitesimal ring


Like before, we need to find <math> \vec r </math>, and then the magnitude. <math> \vec r = <0, 0, z> - < x, 0, 0> = <-x, 0, z> </math>. The magnitude is then <math> \sqrt{x^2 + z^2} </math>.
<math> dI = \frac{dQ}{T} = \frac {\frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{25}}{7} = \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{175} </math>
We can then multiply the magnitudes of <math> q </math> and <math>\vec v </math> to get the final answer:


<math> B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{qvsin(34)}{(\sqrt{x^2 + z^2})^2} </math>
Step 3: Find <math> d\vec B </math>, the magnetic field vector for the infinitesimal ring


'''Example 3:''' As seen in the diagram, <math> \hat r </math> from the proton to the electron is parallel to the electron's velocity. Therefore, <math> \vec velectron\times\hat r </math> is zero.
<math> d\vec B = \frac {\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac {2 dI \pi R^2}{x^3} \hat x </math>
 
<math> d\vec B (<-500, 0, 0>) = \frac {\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac {2 \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{175} \pi 5^2}{-500^3} \hat x = \frac{24 \times 10^{-14}rdr\pi}{7*500^3} \hat x </math>
 
Step 4: Find <math> \vec B </math>, the magnetic field vector over the entire disk
 
<math> \vec B = \int\limits_0^R\ d\vec B </math>
 
<math> \vec B(<-500, 0, 0>) = \int\limits_0^5\  \frac{24 \times 10^{-14}rdr\pi}{7*500^3} \hat x = \frac {25}{2} \frac{24 \times 10^{-14} \pi}{7*500^3} T </math>


==Applications==
==Applications==
===Sagged Conductors for Three Phase typical tower===
Application on Biot-Savart law for Sagged Conductors for Three Phase typical tower
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cae.20365 (2016)
The Biot-Savart law is a fundamental principle in electromagnetism that describes the magnetic field produced by a steady current. It is commonly used to calculate the magnetic field around a current-carrying conductor.
When applying the Biot-Savart law to sagged conductors in a three-phase transmission line on a typical tower, several factors need to be considered. Sagged conductors are often used in overhead transmission lines to accommodate thermal expansion and contraction as well as mechanical loads caused by wind.
===Magnetic Response===
===Magnetic Response===
The Biot-Savart law has applications in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, used to measure the chemical signals given off by compounds. The law can be used to calculate the magnetic responses at the atomic or molecular level, provided that the current density can be obtained mathematically. For more about NMR spectroscopy, see the wiki page [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_magnetic_resonance] [[File:Vortex.jpg|200px|thumb|right|In this example,[http://www.science20.com/news_articles/tendex_and_vortex_lines_new_way_visualize_warped_space_and_time-78171], the yellow arms represent whirring space from a black hole and the red lines represent vortex lines. Astrophysicists may use the Biot-Savart Law to calculate the velocity.]]
The Biot-Savart law has applications in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, used to measure the chemical signals given off by compounds. The law can be used to calculate the magnetic responses at the atomic or molecular level, provided that the current density can be obtained mathematically. For more about NMR spectroscopy, see the wiki page [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_magnetic_resonance] [[File:Vortex.jpg|200px|thumb|right|In this example,[http://www.science20.com/news_articles/tendex_and_vortex_lines_new_way_visualize_warped_space_and_time-78171], the yellow arms represent whirring space from a black hole and the red lines represent vortex lines. Astrophysicists may use the Biot-Savart Law to calculate the velocity.]]
===Aerodynamics===
===Aerodynamics===
In aerodynamics, the Biot-Savart law may be used to calculate the velocity induced by vortex lines, which are lines that are everywhere tangent to the vorticity vector. A vorticity vector is a pseudovector field that describes the tendency of something to rotate, in other words, the curl of the velocity field of a fluid.
In aerodynamics, the Biot-Savart law may be used to calculate the velocity induced by vortex lines, which are lines that are everywhere tangent to the vorticity vector. A vorticity vector is a pseudovector field that describes the tendency of something to rotate; in other words, the vorticity vector is the curl of the velocity field of a fluid.
 
 


===Medical Technology===
===Medical Technology===
Aside from applications in aerospace engineering and chemistry, the Biot-Savart law also plays an important role in MRI imaging techniques. It's important to understand how a looped wire can create a current so these technologies can be as accurate as possible without harming patients who receive them.
Aside from applications in aerospace engineering and chemistry, the Biot-Savart law also plays an important role in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRIs are a crucial piece of technology in the medical field; they are used for diagnosing cancer, detecting stress fractures, analyzing musculoskeletal injuries, and much more. An MRI machine is essentially one large magnetic field, and the hydrogen proton's axes in the human body all line up when a person is placed in an MRI. The magnetic field in an MRI is created by electric coils with moving electrons, which carry a current through the coils. This current is produced by exposing moving electrons to the electric field in the coils. if the moving electrons did not create magnetic fields, then no current would run through the coils, and MRIs would not exist.


==History==
==History==


Felix Savart was born on June 30, 1791 in Mezieres, France to a family with a strong association with military engineering schools. While completing his formal education in 1808 at the university in Metz, Savart decided to pursue medicine and become a physician. After serving a short stint in Napoleon's army in the the first engineering battalion, he resumed his medical training and graduated from Strasbourg in 1816. During his medical studies, Savart became interested in first century Roman writer Aulus Cornelius Celsus and his famous medical book ''De medicinia''. Savart began working on a translation and set up a medical practice in Metz in 1817, but gradually became more interested in physics than patients, particularly in sound and acoustics. He began building violins as a way to explore the form of the instrument through mathematical principles.  
Felix Savart was born on June 30, 1791 in Mezieres, France to a family with a strong association with military engineering schools. While completing his formal education in 1808 at the university in Metz, Savart decided to pursue medicine and become a physician. After serving a short stint in Napoleon's army in the the first engineering battalion, he resumed his medical training and graduated from Strasbourg in 1816. During his medical studies, Savart became interested in first century Roman writer Aulus Cornelius Celsus and his famous medical book ''De medicinia''. Savart began working on a translation and set up a medical practice in Metz in 1817, but he gradually became more interested in physics rather than patients, particularly in sound and acoustics. He began building violins as a way to explore the form of the instrument through mathematical principles.  


In 1819, Savart officially closed the doors of his medical practice and went to Paris to find a publisher for the translation of  ''De medicina''. While there, he attended a lecture on acoustics at by Jean-Baptiste Biot at the Faculty of Sciences. The two met there and began collaboration, when in 1820, Hans Christian Oersted published that a compass needle placed near a wire carrying current pointed at right angles to the wire. Biot and Savart began looking more closely into the field produced by a wire, and by using the oscillation of a magnetic dipole to determine the strength of the field close to a wire carrying current, they discovered what is now called the Biot-Savart Law [[http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Savart.html]].
In 1819, Savart officially closed the doors of his medical practice and went to Paris to find a publisher for the translation of  ''De medicina''. While there, he attended a lecture on acoustics by Jean-Baptiste Biot at the Faculty of Sciences. The two met there and began collaboration, when in 1820, Hans Christian Oersted published his findings regarding a compass needle's behavior when placed near a current-carrying wire: the needle pointed at right angles to the wire. Biot and Savart began looking more closely into the field produced by a current-carrying wire, and by using the oscillation of a magnetic dipole to determine the strength of the field close to a current-carrying wire, they discovered what is now called the Biot-Savart Law [[http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Savart.html]].


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 91: Line 164:
==References==
==References==


This section contains the the references you used while writing this page
Matter & Interactions vol. II
 
Khawaja, Arsalan & Huang, Qi. (2016). Characteristic estimation of high voltage transmission line conductors with simultaneous magnetic field and current measurements. 1-6. 10.1109/I2MTC.2016.7520595.


[[Category:Which Category did you place this in?]]
[[Category:Which Category did you place this in?]]

Latest revision as of 13:47, 28 November 2023

CLAIMED BY Alexander Arredondo Fall 2023

CLAIMED BY Olivia Wang Fall 2023

A Visual of the Magnetic Field of a Current-Carrying Wire. [1]

The Biot-Savart (pronounced bee-yo sahv-ar) Law quantitatively describes the magnetic field produced by a moving point charge. This law can be viewed as the magnetic counterpart of Coulomb's Law, which quantitatively describes the electric field produced by a point charge. [3] The law is named after Jean-Baptiste Biot and Felix Savart, the two scientists who discovered the law in 1820.

The Main Idea

A moving point charge produces a magnetic field in addition to its intrinsic electric field. As opposed to an electric field, which eminates outward in all directions, the magnetic field of a point charge will curl around the point charge.

The Biot-Savart Law relates magnetic fields to the currents which are their sources. In a similar manner, Coulomb's law relates electric fields to the point charges which are their sources. Finding the magnetic field resulting from a current distribution involves the vector product, and is inherently a calculus problem when the distance from the current to the field point is continuously changing. The relationship between the magnetic field contribution and its source current element is called the Biot-Savart law.

The direction of the magnetic field contribution follows the right hand rule illustrated for a straight wire. This direction arises from the vector product nature of the dependence upon electric current.

A Mathematical Model

The single moving point charge form of the Biot-Savart Law is [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{q\vec v \times \hat r}{r^2} }[/math]. The permeability of free space, or the ease of producing a magnetic field in a vacuum, is a constant [math]\displaystyle{ 4\pi \times 10^{-7} \frac{T * m^2}{C * \frac{m}{s}} }[/math], denoted [math]\displaystyle{ \mu_0 }[/math]. The above equation describes the magnetic field vector [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B }[/math] at a point [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math] away from the moving point charge with velocity [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v }[/math] and charge [math]\displaystyle{ q }[/math]. Remember that [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r = \vec r_{obs} - \vec r_{source} }[/math]. Note: The charge [math]\displaystyle{ q }[/math] retains its sign in the Biot-Savart Law. For an electron, [math]\displaystyle{ q }[/math] in the Biot-Savart Law would be equal to [math]\displaystyle{ -1.6 \times 10^{-19} C }[/math].

The short wire form of the Biot-Savart Law is [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B=\frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{I \Delta\vec l \times \hat r}{r^2} }[/math]. This equation describes the magnetic field vector [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B }[/math] at a point [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math] away from the short wire with length [math]\displaystyle{ \Delta\vec l }[/math] and current [math]\displaystyle{ I }[/math].


Direction of the Magnetic Field Vector: The direction of the magnetic field vector is different from the direction of the electric field vector. The direction of the magnetic field vector is given by the cross product of two distinct vectors: namely either [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v }[/math] or [math]\displaystyle{ \Delta\vec l }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math]. The cross product of two vectors is perpendicular to the two original vectors.

Example: Find the direction of the magnetic field of a point charge moving in the [math]\displaystyle{ +x }[/math] direction at a point in the [math]\displaystyle{ -y }[/math] direction.

Direction of [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B = \hat v \times \hat r = \lt 1, 0, 0\gt \times \lt 0, -1, 0\gt = \begin{bmatrix}\hat x & \hat y & \hat z \\ 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix} = \lt 0, 0, -1\gt }[/math], or in the [math]\displaystyle{ -z }[/math] direction

You can also calculate the cross product, using formula [math]\displaystyle{ \vec A\times\vec B = \lt A_yB_z - A_zB_y, A_zB_x - A_xB_z, A_xB_y-A_yB_z\gt }[/math]

Magnitude of Magnetic Field Vector: The magnitude of the magnetic field vector for a single moving point charge is given by [math]\displaystyle{ B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac{q v \sin\theta}{r^2} }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ q v \sin\theta }[/math] is the polar form of the cross product and [math]\displaystyle{ \theta }[/math] is the angle between the two vectors [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math].

The magnitude of the magnetic field vector for a short wire is given by [math]\displaystyle{ B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac{I \Delta l \sin\theta}{r^2} }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ I \Delta l \sin\theta }[/math] is the polar form of the cross product and [math]\displaystyle{ \theta }[/math] is the angle between the two vectors [math]\displaystyle{ \Delta\vec l }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math].

A Computational Model

Check out this link: https://trinket.io/glowscript/93785debae for a look at a moving point charge acted on by a magnetic force. This magnetic force acts on the point charge since the point charge is moving with a certain velocity. Magnetic force goes hand-in-hand with magnetic field. Just as a point charge can only create a magnetic field if the point charge is moving, a point charge can only feel the force from a magnetic field if the point charge has a velocity. This computational model shows how a moving point charge, which creates its own magnetic field, is acted on by an external magnetic field.

For a computational model of a wire carrying current, see the wiki page on the Biot-Savart Law for Currents [4].

Using the Right-Hand Rule for Biot-Savart Law

Put your index finger in the direction of the velocity of the particle, and your middle finger out towards the r hat. Make sure these two are 90 degrees away from each other. Now, stick your thumb up. If the particle you are following is positive, the cross product of the velocity of the particle and the r hat is in the direction of your thumb. If the particle is negative, the cross product of the particle and the r hat is in the opposite direction of your thumb.

Solving Biot-Savart Problem strategy

To solve Biot-Savart law problem, the following steps are helpful:

1. Identify that the Biot-Savart law is the chosen method to solve the given problem. If there is symmetry in the problem comparing 𝐁⃗ and 𝐝𝐥⃗ ,Ampère’s law may be the preferred method to solve the question, which will be discussed in Ampère’s Law.

2. Draw the current element length 𝑑𝐥⃗ and the unit vector 𝐫ˆ, noting that 𝑑𝐥⃗ points in the direction of the current and 𝐫ˆ points from the current element toward the point where the field is desired.

3. Calculate the cross product 𝑑𝐥⃗ ×𝐫ˆ. The resultant vector gives the direction of the magnetic field according to the Biot-Savart law.

4. Use Equation and substitute all given quantities into the expression to solve for the magnetic field. Note all variables that remain constant over the entire length of the wire may be factored out of the integration.

5. Use the right-hand rule to verify the direction of the magnetic field produced from the current or to write down the direction of the magnetic field if only the magnitude was solved for in the previous part.

Examples

See below for solutions to these examples.

Example 1

An electron located at the origin is moving at [math]\displaystyle{ 2 \times 10^8 \frac{m}{s} }[/math] in the [math]\displaystyle{ +x }[/math] direction. What is the magnetic field at [math]\displaystyle{ \lt 200, -300, 0\gt m }[/math] due to the moving electron?

Example 2

A proton is located on the [math]\displaystyle{ +x }[/math] axis and is moving with a velocity [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v }[/math] in the [math]\displaystyle{ -y }[/math] direction. What is the magnitude of the magnetic field due to the moving proton at [math]\displaystyle{ \lt 0, 0, z\gt }[/math] if the angle [math]\displaystyle{ \theta }[/math] between [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v }[/math] of the proton and [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math] equals [math]\displaystyle{ 34° }[/math]?

Example 3

An electron located at the origin is moving with velocity [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v_{electron} }[/math] in the [math]\displaystyle{ +z }[/math] direction. A proton is located directly in front of the electron and is moving with a velocity [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v_{proton} }[/math] in the [math]\displaystyle{ -y }[/math] direction. What is the magnetic field at the location of the proton due to the moving electron?

Example 4

A thin plastic disk with radius [math]\displaystyle{ 500 cm }[/math] and negative charge [math]\displaystyle{ -6 \times 10^{-7} C }[/math] centered at the origin located in the [math]\displaystyle{ y-z }[/math] plane is rotating with a period of [math]\displaystyle{ 7 s }[/math] clockwise when viewed from the negative x axis. Determine the magnetic field at [math]\displaystyle{ \vec d = \lt -50000, 0, 0\gt cm. }[/math]

Answers

Example 1:

Example 1
Example 1

First, calculate [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math], which is [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r = \lt 200, -300, 0\gt -\lt 0,0,0\gt =\lt 200, -300, 0\gt m }[/math]. Using [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math], calculate [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math]: [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r = \frac{ \lt 200, -300, 0\gt }{\sqrt {200^2 + -300^2}}= \lt 0.554, -0.832, 0\gt }[/math]

Next, calculate [math]\displaystyle{ q \vec v }[/math]. Remember that an electron carries a negative charge: [math]\displaystyle{ -1.6 \times 10^{-19}* \lt 2 \times 10^8, 0, 0\gt = \lt -3.2 \times 10^{-11}, 0, 0\gt }[/math]. Next, compute the cross product, [math]\displaystyle{ q\vec v\times\hat r }[/math]. The cross product is given as [math]\displaystyle{ \vec A\times\vec B = \lt A_xB_z - A_zB_y, A_zB_x - A_xB_z, A_xB_y-A_yB_z\gt }[/math] or by computing the determinant of the two vectors in a 3 x 3 matrix. The cross product in this case is [math]\displaystyle{ \lt 0, 0, 2.65 \times 10^{-11}\gt }[/math].

Finally, divide [math]\displaystyle{ q\vec v\times\hat r }[/math] by the magnitude of [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math] squared: [math]\displaystyle{ \frac{ \lt 0, 0, 2.65 \times 10^{-11}\gt }{360.55} = \lt 0, 0, 7.34 \times 10^{-14}\gt }[/math]. Multiply by the constant [math]\displaystyle{ 1 \times 10^{-7} }[/math] given in the formula, and the final answer is [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B = \lt 0, 0, 7.34 \times 10^{-21}\gt T }[/math]

Example 2:

Example 2
Example 2

First, as in example one, calculate [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math], and then the magnitude of [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math]. [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r = \lt 0, 0, z\gt - \lt x, 0, 0\gt = \lt -x, 0, z\gt }[/math]. The magnitude of [math]\displaystyle{ \vec r }[/math] is then [math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{x^2 + z^2} }[/math]. We can then multiply the magnitudes of [math]\displaystyle{ q,\vec v, }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ sin }[/math] ([math]\displaystyle{ \theta }[/math]) to get the final answer:

[math]\displaystyle{ B = \frac{\mu_0}{4\pi}\frac{qvsin(34°)}{(\sqrt{x^2 + z^2})^2} }[/math]

Example 3:

Example 3
Example 3

As seen in the diagram, [math]\displaystyle{ \hat r }[/math] from the proton to the electron is parallel to the electron's velocity. Therefore, [math]\displaystyle{ \vec v_{electron}\times\hat r }[/math] is zero because the two vectors are parallel ([math]\displaystyle{ \theta=0 }[/math]°).

Example 4:

Example 4
Example 4

To find the overall magnetic field vector at [math]\displaystyle{ \vec d }[/math], the disk must be broken down into many infinitesimally small rings.

Step 1: Find [math]\displaystyle{ dQ }[/math], the amount of charge for an infinitesimal ring

[math]\displaystyle{ \frac{dQ}{2\pi r dr} = \frac{Q}{\pi R^2} }[/math]

[math]\displaystyle{ dQ = \frac{-6 \times 10^{-7}}{5^2\pi} 2\pi r dr = \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{25} }[/math]

Step 2: Find [math]\displaystyle{ dI }[/math], the current in this infinitesimal ring

[math]\displaystyle{ dI = \frac{dQ}{T} = \frac {\frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{25}}{7} = \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{175} }[/math]

Step 3: Find [math]\displaystyle{ d\vec B }[/math], the magnetic field vector for the infinitesimal ring

[math]\displaystyle{ d\vec B = \frac {\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac {2 dI \pi R^2}{x^3} \hat x }[/math]

[math]\displaystyle{ d\vec B (\lt -500, 0, 0\gt ) = \frac {\mu_0}{4\pi} \frac {2 \frac{-12 \times 10^{-7}rdr}{175} \pi 5^2}{-500^3} \hat x = \frac{24 \times 10^{-14}rdr\pi}{7*500^3} \hat x }[/math]

Step 4: Find [math]\displaystyle{ \vec B }[/math], the magnetic field vector over the entire disk

[math]\displaystyle{ \vec B = \int\limits_0^R\ d\vec B }[/math]

[math]\displaystyle{ \vec B(\lt -500, 0, 0\gt ) = \int\limits_0^5\ \frac{24 \times 10^{-14}rdr\pi}{7*500^3} \hat x = \frac {25}{2} \frac{24 \times 10^{-14} \pi}{7*500^3} T }[/math]

Applications

Sagged Conductors for Three Phase typical tower

Application on Biot-Savart law for Sagged Conductors for Three Phase typical tower https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cae.20365 (2016) The Biot-Savart law is a fundamental principle in electromagnetism that describes the magnetic field produced by a steady current. It is commonly used to calculate the magnetic field around a current-carrying conductor. When applying the Biot-Savart law to sagged conductors in a three-phase transmission line on a typical tower, several factors need to be considered. Sagged conductors are often used in overhead transmission lines to accommodate thermal expansion and contraction as well as mechanical loads caused by wind.

Magnetic Response

The Biot-Savart law has applications in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, used to measure the chemical signals given off by compounds. The law can be used to calculate the magnetic responses at the atomic or molecular level, provided that the current density can be obtained mathematically. For more about NMR spectroscopy, see the wiki page [5]

In this example,[2], the yellow arms represent whirring space from a black hole and the red lines represent vortex lines. Astrophysicists may use the Biot-Savart Law to calculate the velocity.

Aerodynamics

In aerodynamics, the Biot-Savart law may be used to calculate the velocity induced by vortex lines, which are lines that are everywhere tangent to the vorticity vector. A vorticity vector is a pseudovector field that describes the tendency of something to rotate; in other words, the vorticity vector is the curl of the velocity field of a fluid.

Medical Technology

Aside from applications in aerospace engineering and chemistry, the Biot-Savart law also plays an important role in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRIs are a crucial piece of technology in the medical field; they are used for diagnosing cancer, detecting stress fractures, analyzing musculoskeletal injuries, and much more. An MRI machine is essentially one large magnetic field, and the hydrogen proton's axes in the human body all line up when a person is placed in an MRI. The magnetic field in an MRI is created by electric coils with moving electrons, which carry a current through the coils. This current is produced by exposing moving electrons to the electric field in the coils. if the moving electrons did not create magnetic fields, then no current would run through the coils, and MRIs would not exist.

History

Felix Savart was born on June 30, 1791 in Mezieres, France to a family with a strong association with military engineering schools. While completing his formal education in 1808 at the university in Metz, Savart decided to pursue medicine and become a physician. After serving a short stint in Napoleon's army in the the first engineering battalion, he resumed his medical training and graduated from Strasbourg in 1816. During his medical studies, Savart became interested in first century Roman writer Aulus Cornelius Celsus and his famous medical book De medicinia. Savart began working on a translation and set up a medical practice in Metz in 1817, but he gradually became more interested in physics rather than patients, particularly in sound and acoustics. He began building violins as a way to explore the form of the instrument through mathematical principles.

In 1819, Savart officially closed the doors of his medical practice and went to Paris to find a publisher for the translation of De medicina. While there, he attended a lecture on acoustics by Jean-Baptiste Biot at the Faculty of Sciences. The two met there and began collaboration, when in 1820, Hans Christian Oersted published his findings regarding a compass needle's behavior when placed near a current-carrying wire: the needle pointed at right angles to the wire. Biot and Savart began looking more closely into the field produced by a current-carrying wire, and by using the oscillation of a magnetic dipole to determine the strength of the field close to a current-carrying wire, they discovered what is now called the Biot-Savart Law [[6]].

See also

Right hand rule [[7]] Biot-Savart Law for Currents [[8]] Jean-Baptiste Biot [[9]].

External links

"Teach Engineering" on Biot-Savart [10] Derivation and Examples [11] Biot-Savart and Ampere's Law on MIT OpenCourse [12]

References

Matter & Interactions vol. II

Khawaja, Arsalan & Huang, Qi. (2016). Characteristic estimation of high voltage transmission line conductors with simultaneous magnetic field and current measurements. 1-6. 10.1109/I2MTC.2016.7520595.