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Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

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Page 1: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Do now!

Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Page 2: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Last lesson

• Field around a wire

Page 3: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Moving charges (currents)

Moving charges (electric currents) also produce a magnetic field

http://www.sciencebuddies.org

Conventional current – electrons flow in the opposite direction

Page 4: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Magnetic field around a straight wire

Stronger field closer to wire

You can use the right hand screw rule to decide which direction the field goes

Page 5: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

To make an electromagnet stronger?

Page 6: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

To make an electromagnet strongerThe 3 C’s

• More Coils

• More Current

• Use an iron Core

Page 7: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Today’s lesson

• Field patterns around a wire, solenoid and coil.

• The motor effect

• Making a loudspeaker

Page 8: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Shape around a single coil of wire

Page 9: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Field around a coil

Page 10: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

A side view

Page 11: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Field around a solenoid (coil)

Page 12: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

The Motor Effect

When a current is placed in a magnetic field it will experience a force (provided the current is not parallel to the field). This is called the motor effect.

Can you copy this sentence into your

books please.

Page 13: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

The Motor Effect

The direction of the force on a current in a magnetic field is given by Flemming’s left hand rule.

Centre finger = Conventional Current

First finger = Field direction

Thumb = Motion

Page 14: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

The Motor Effect

The direction of the force on a current in a magnetic field is given by Flemming’s left hand rule.

Centre finger = Conventional Current (+ to -)

First finger = Field direction (N to S)

Thumb = Motion

Can you copy this please?

WITH DIAGRAM!

Page 15: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Sample question

In this example, which way will the wire be pushed? (red is north on the magnets)

Page 16: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Sample question

In this example, which way will the wire be pushed? (red is north on the magnets)

Current

Field

Page 17: Do now! Can you stick the sheet in your book please?

Building a loudspeaker

These also use the motor effect

Coil in here

magnet