asked 111k views
4 votes
Suppose that the emf from a rod moving in a magnetic field was used to supply the current to illuminate a light bulb in a circuit, and the force needed to keep the rod moving is . What happens to the force needed drive the motion of the rod if the light bulb is removed

asked
User Kdub
by
8.2k points

1 Answer

0 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

The rod moving in a magnetic field and induces an emf which is used to illuminate the bulb. But if the bulb is removed form the circuit, the circuit is opened.

For an open circuit, no current is passes through the moving rod. If there is no current along the rod, then no magnetic field developed around the rod. Because moving charges nothing but current produces the magnetic field around the rod.

The formula for the magnetic force on the rod is,


F_{\mathrm{B}} &=I(l * B)


=I l B \sin \theta

The current along the rod is zero because the bulb is removed and the magnetic field around the rod is zero because no current is passes through the rod.

Then calculate the magnetic force on the rod as follows:

\
F_{\mathrm{B}} &=I l B \sin \theta


=(0)(l)(0) \sin \theta =0 \mathrm{N}

Thus, no force is needed because there is no longer magnetic field developed around the rod.

answered
User Vdclouis
by
8.0k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.