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Suppose the circuit in Fig. 7.41 has been connected for a long time when suddenly, at time t=0, switch S is thrown from A to B, bypassing the battery.

Notice the similarity to Eq. 7.28-in a sense, the rectangular toroid is a short coaxial cable, turned on its side.

(a) What is the current at any subsequent time t?

(b) What is the total energy delivered to the resistor?

(c) Show that this is equal to the energy originally stored in the inductor.

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) Theenergydeliveredtotheresistoris12Lε0R2.(b) Theenergydeliveredtotheresistoris12Lε0R2.(c) Theenergydeliveredtotheinductoris12Lε0R2.

Step by step solution

01

Energy in magnetic fields

When the current is supplied to a circuit in a magnetic field, then it moves against the direction of the back emf.

The work done by a charge in moving against the back emf of the circuit is described as the ‘energy in the magnetic field’.

02

Step 2(a): The current at any subsequent time

Using Ohm’s law, the formula for the initial current of the circuit is given by,

I0=ε0R

The formula for the Induced emf in the circuit is given by,

-LdIdt=IRdIdt=-RLI

Then the expression for the current in the circuit as a function of the subsequent time is given by,

I=I0e-RtLI(t)=ε0Re-RtL

Hence, the current at any subsequent time isI(t)=ε0Re-RtL.

03

Step 3(b): The total energy delivered to the resistor

The formula for the power due to the resistance of the circuit is given by,

P=I2RP=ε0Re-RtL2RP=ε0R2e-2RtLRP=ε02R2e-2RtLR

Rewrite the equation as:

P=ε02Re-2RtL

Similarly, the formula for the power required by the charge to move against the emf is given by,

P=dWdtdW=PdtdW=ε02Re-2RtLdt

Here, W is the work done or the energy delivered to the resistor.

Integrating both sides,

W=ε02R0e-2RtLdtW=ε02R-L2Re-2RtL0W=ε02R0+L2RW=12Lε0R2

Hence, the energy delivered to the resistor is12Lε0R2.

04

Step 4(c): The energy originally stored in the inductor

Using the energy formula, the expression for theenergy originally stored in the inductor is given by,

W0=12LI02W0=12Lε0R2

Comparing the energydelivered to the resistor with the energy originally stored in the inductor,

W=W0

Hence, the energy delivered to the resistor is equal to the energy originally stored in the inductor.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

An alternating current I(t)=I0cos(ωt) (amplitude 0.5 A, frequency ) flows down a straight wire, which runs along the axis of a toroidal coil with rectangular cross section (inner radius 1cm , outer radius 2 cm , height 1 cm, 1000 turns). The coil is connected to a 500Ω resistor.

(a) In the quasistatic approximation, what emf is induced in the toroid? Find the current, IR(t), in the resistor.

(b) Calculate the back emf in the coil, due to the current IR(t) . What is the ratio of the amplitudes of this back emf and the "direct" emf in (a)?

Question: Suppose j(r)is constant in time but ρ(r,t)is not-conditions that

might prevail, for instance, during the charging of a capacitor.

(a) Show that the charge density at any particular point is a linear function of time:

ρ(r,t)=ρ(r,0)+ρ(r,0)t

whereρ(r,0)is the time derivative of at . [Hint: Use the continuity equation.]

This is not an electrostatic or magnetostatic configuration: nevertheless, rather surprisingly, both Coulomb's law (Eq. 2.8) and the Biot-Savart law (Eq. 5.42) hold, as you can confirm by showing that they satisfy Maxwell's equations. In particular:

(b) Show that

B(r)=μ04πJ(r')×r^r2dτ'

obeys Ampere's law with Maxwell's displacement current term.

An alternating current l=l0cos(wt)flows down a long straight wire, and returns along a coaxial conducting tube of radius a.

(a) In what direction does the induced electric field point (radial, circumferential, or longitudinal)?

(b) Assuming that the field goes to zero as s, findE=(s,t).

Question: Assuming that "Coulomb's law" for magnetic charges ( qm) reads

F=μ04πqm1qm2r2r^

Work out the force law for a monopole moving with velocity through electric and magnetic fields E and B.

(a) Referring to Prob. 5.52(a) and Eq. 7.18, show that

E=-At (7.66) for Faraday-induced electric fields. Check this result by taking the divergence and curl of both sides.

(b) A spherical shell of radiusR carries a uniform surface charge σ. It spins about a fixed axis at an angular velocity ω(t)that changes slowly with time. Find the electric field inside and outside the sphere. [Hint: There are two contributions here: the Coulomb field due to the charge, and the Faraday field due to the changing B. Refer to Ex. 5.11.]

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