Determine which of thefourmaterials is magnetic

Assignment Help Physics
Reference no: EM13971373

1. Introduction

This (assessed) assignment forms one component of NIE2299. It aims to deepen your conceptual understanding of magnetostatic forces and fields. There are two 3-hour timetabled periods for you to undertake the practical and simulation work. If you complete all the practical work in the first timetabled session then you should use the time in the second timetabled session for writing up your report. The tutor will be on hand in the sessionsto assist you (as far as is compatible with the explanations you give being your own work).

You may not be able to explain all of your experimental observations until close to the end of autumn term (i.e. after you have completed the lecture course). This is why the deadline has been set as it has. You are advised to start writing the report as soon as possible, however, adding explanatory material as you learn it. (You need to manage your time and leaving the entire report until you have covered all the relevant material in the lectures would risk overloading yourself with work at a time when several deadlines for submission of work across multiple modules might coincide.)

The word limit on your report (excluding title page, equations, words within figures and appendices but including words in figure captions) is 2,500. You must state clearly the word count at the start of the report. Appendices may be included for your own purposes (e.g. revision) but will not be read by the assessor.

In your report you will need to provide figures that describe various equipment configurations you have used in the experiments. If you have access to a camera (e.g. incorporated into your mobile phone) then taking a picture of the equipment for pasting it into your report is a particularly effective and efficient way of recoding this information. If you do not have access to a camera then line diagrams are an entirely acceptable alternative.

2. Practical work

You have been given four items made of different materials: PVC, copper, aluminium and steel. You have also been given some powerful, neodymium magnets. One of the small magnets is attached to a threaded stud.

1. Magnetic materials and magnetic shielding

Determine which of thefourmaterials is magnetic and describe how you made this determination. Determine whether a non-magnetic conductor can be used to ‘block' or ‘shield' a magnetic field and describe how you made this determination.

2. Faraday's law and Lenz's law

Take the copper pipe and hold it vertically. Drop amagnetdown it. Does it fall as you would expect? Record your observations. Explain how, and why, the motion of the falling magnet is modified by the copper pipe. (You may not be able to explain why the motion of the magnet is modified until you have completed the electromagnetics part of the module.

3. Homopolar motor

Using only an AA battery, a piece of conducting wire and the small magnets construct a motor. [Hint: use the wire to make a simple rotor that can balance and rotate freely on one end of the battery and use the magnet(s) to provide a suitable magnetic field. Record (using the camera on your mobile phone or a sketch) the structure of your motor. In your report explain how the motor works including the direction of rotor rotation. (Note: You may need to wait until you have covered the theory for this in the lectures before you can explain the motor principles fully. To explain the direction of rotation you will need to establish the polarity of the magnet. You can do this by hanging the magnet by a thread and observing its orientation in the Earth's magnetic field.)

4. Simulation

Acknowledgement: the simulation software used in the following work was developed for educational use by the University of Colorado under the PHET interactive simulations project.

5. Earth's magnetic field

Start the simulation magnets_and_electromagnets_en.

This may be located in a folder called NIE2299 on the root of the d: (data) drive. It can also be found, however, at https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/magnets-and-electromagnets

Click (if necessary) on the ‘Bar Magnet' tab. The ‘Show Field'box should be ticked and all other boxes should be un-ticked. Each of small compass needles shows the direction of the magnetic field at a point. The red end of the compass is a north-seeking pole, i.e. it point towards the geographical north pole of the Earth. Note which pole of the large bar magnet it points to. Can you explain this?Tick the ‘Show Planet Earth' box. Does this help in you explain?

[Hint: remember that the north poles on magnets are more strictly called north-seeking poles. North is a word of geographical, not magnetic, origin, i.e. north is the direction that points to the arctic pole of the Earth.It may help you to explain what you observed above to ask yourself whether the magnetic pole of the Earth located in the arctic is a north (i.e. north-seeking) pole or a south (i.e. a south-seeking) pole.]

6. Flux density decay law
Untick the ‘Show Planet Earth' box and tick the ‘Show Field Meter' box.The field meter measures magnetic flux density.The four readings on the metre are the magnitude of the flux density(in gauss), the x-directed component of the flux density, the y-directed component of the flux density and the angle (in degrees) between the flux density vector and the x-direction. Gauss (G) is the cgs (centimetre, gram, second) unit of flux density which has been superseded by the mks (metre, kilogram, second) unit i.e., the tesla (T). 1 G = 10-4 T. The gauss is still widely used in the USA, however(and occasionally elsewhere).

Use the field meter to estimate (as accurately as you are able) the index n in the magnetic flux density decay law (of the form B ?1/rn) with distance by measuring the flux, B1 and B2) at two distances, r1 and r2, from one end of the magnet on the line of symmetry along the long dimension of the magnet. Comment on whether this is consistent with an inverse square law and whether you would expect it to be. [Hint: take the log of the ratio of the two measurements, use the logarithm rule log(ax) = x log(a), and rearrange the formula to give n explicitly.] Repeat this for lines starting on the end of the magnet but perpendicular to the line of symmetry along the long dimension and lines making 45 degrees with the line of symmetry.

7. Coil current and coil resistance
Select the ‘Electromagnet' Tab. Set the ‘Current Source'to DC. Adjust the number of turns in the coil of the electromagnet to one. Use the field meter to find the magnetic flux density inside the coil. Assuming that the single-turn coil has a radius on 1 cm, calculate the current flowing through the coil and thus the resistance of the coil.

8. Induction
Start the simulation faraday_en.This may be located in a folder called NIE2299 on the root of the d: (data) drive. It can also be found, however, at https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/faraday

Select (if necessary) the ‘Pickup Coil' tab.

Drag the bar magnet into the coil. Observe the lamp (which lights when there is a flow of current) as you drag the magnet and as the magnet lies stationary inside the coil. Drag the magnet through the coil at different speeds. Explain (qualitatively) your observation.

Replace the lamp with the meter by clicking on the meter icon in the Pickup Coil box on the lower left of the simulation interface). Move the magnet into and out of the coil. What do you notice about the polarity of the current (or voltage) indicated in the meter?

Click on the ‘Transformer' tab.

Set the ‘Current Source' (if necessary) to DC.

Drag the electromagnet (the coil attached to the current source) inside the pickup coil. Observe the lamp (which indicates a flow of current) as you drag the electromagnet inside the coil and as the electromagnet lies stationary inside the pickup coil. Explain (qualitatively) your observation. How many ways can you find of causing the lamp to light? Describe each of these ways and explain (qualitatively) its effect.

9. Effect of frequency on induction

Set the ‘Current Source' to AC. Using the meter as the indicator assess (qualitatively) the intensity of the induced voltage in the pickup coil and configure the coils to maximise this voltage. Change the frequency of the source from 50% to 100% and find the factor by which the peak voltage in the secondary winding changes. You may find that pausing the simulation (using the pause button at the bottom of the simulation window) and then advancing the simulation in discrete steps (using the advance button to the left of the pause button) makes estimating the peak deflection of the meter pointer easier. Explain your observation quantitatively.

Reference no: EM13971373

Questions Cloud

How does the roman poet ovid combine elements : How does the Roman poet Ovid combine elements from each of these earlier poets' versions to make his own version of the myth in his poem, the Metamorphoses (OM 374-381)
Would you say the music is expressionistic : Would you say the music is expressionistic? Can you give some examples of what expressionist features are present in the music itself? What about the opera as a whole (acting, subject, staging...not just the music)
What is purpose of statement of cost of goods manufactured : What is the purpose of the Statement of Cost of Goods Manufactured? The cost of a manufactured product generally consists of which of the following costs?
Write down your reactions to the music : Write down your reactions to the music as well as to the choreography. How do you think they relate to one another? Does either seems "strange" to you? What about the piece (either dance or music) feels "modern" to you? Does it still feel "modern"..
Determine which of thefourmaterials is magnetic : Determine which of thefourmaterials is magnetic and describe how you made this determination. Determine whether a non-magnetic conductor can be used to ‘block' or ‘shield' a magnetic field and describe how you made this determination.
The present market price per share is $36. : If the company were to declare a 12 percent stock dividend, what would happen to these accounts? A 25 percent stock dividend? A 5 percent stock dividend?
What is the maximum net gain : What is the maximum net gain (after the cost of the options is taken into account)? Show all working in detail including the strategy, cost and payoff of the options and total payoff.
What are their balances after closing : Assuming that there were no other service revenue and rent expense transactions during 2012, journalize Gunther's closing entries at the end of 2012.
Compute the coefficient of variation : A. Using the last two colums, compute the coefficient of variation for each of the four companies. Which company is the least risky? Which company is the most risky? B. Discuss which of the acquisition candidates is the most likely to reduce Treyno..

Reviews

Write a Review

Physics Questions & Answers

  What is the exposure rate

A current of 10^-14 A is produced in a free-air chamber operating under saturation conditions. The sensitive volume, in which electronic equilibrium exists, contains 0.22g of air. What is the exposure rate .

  Charge-net electrostatic force on it is zero

A charge of -2.45 nC and acharge of -5.65 nC are separatedby a distance of 70.0 cm. Find the position at which a third charge of +7.20 nC can be placed so that the net electrostatic force on it is zero. a) cm from the -2.45 nC charge b)cm fromthe -5...

  Q1 a wheel is spinning clockwise at a 120 revolutions per

q1. a wheel is spinning clockwise at a 12.0 revolutions per second at t 0. because of friction in the bearings

  Suppose you had ignored the time it takes the sound to

you are climbing in the high sierra where you suddenly find yourself at the edge of a fog shrouded cliff. to find the

  How much work must the spacecraft engines perform to move

question a 2590-kg spacecraft is in a circular orbit 2720 km above the surface of mars.how much work must the

  What is the maximum thickness of ice above this area that

the rear window of a van is coated with a layer of ice at 0degc. the density of ice is 917 kgm3 and the latent heat of

  Q1 an iron plate 30 cm thick is magnetized to saturation in

q1. an iron plate 30 cm thick is magnetized to saturation in a direction parallel to the surfaces of the plate. a 20

  Calculate the allowed wavelengths for emission of a photon

Calculate the allowed wavelengths for the emission of a photon initially in the n=3 state in a hydrogen atom

  Find the volume flow rate through the pipe

Water moves through a constricted pipe in steady, ideal flow. At the lower point the pressure is 1.65 105 Pa and the pipe radius is 2.60 cm. Find the volume flow rate through the pipe

  What will its velocity be the instant prior to impact

A 400kg baby grand piano is raised to the roof of a 100m building. If the cable breaks as it reaches this height, what will its velocity be the instant prior to impact

  Find how far has it traveled in this time

Stopping a 747 A 747 jetliner lands and begins to slow to a stop as it moves along the runway. find How far has it traveled in this time

  Find the time it takes for the package to land

An airplane is dropping an aid package in a remote area. Find the time it takes for the package to land

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd