A magnetic dipole m is imbedded at the center of a sphere (radius R) of linear magnetic material (permeability μ). Show that the magnetic field inside the sphere 0<rR is

μ4π{1r3[3(m.r^r^-m)]+2(μ0-μ)m(2μ0+μ)R3}

What is the field outside the sphere?

Short Answer

Expert verified

The filed inside the sphere isμ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)m and outside the sphere is μ04π3μm2μ0+μ1r3[3(mr^)r^m].

Step by step solution

01

Write the given data from the question.

The magnetic dipole is m.

The radius of sphere is R.

The magnetic permeability is μ.

02

Determine the formulas to calculate the magnetic field inside the sphere.

The expression for the magnetic field at the centre of sphere due to dipole is given as follows.

Bcentre=μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^-m)

The expression for surface current density is given as follows.

Kb=M(R)×r^

03

Calculate the magnetic field inside the sphere.

The magnetic dipole moment due to embedded dipole is given by,

mb=χmm

Here,χmis the magnetic susceptibility and magnetic moment of the dipole.

The net dipole at the centre of the sphere is given by,

mcentre=m+mb

Substitute χmmfor mbinto above equation.

mcentre=m+χmmmcentre=m(1+χm)

Substituteμμ0for1+χminto above equation.

mcentre=μμ0m

The magnetic field at the centre of the sphere is given by,

Bcentre=μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)

The magnetic field at surface due to surface bound current is given by,

Bsurface=Am

Here,Ais the constant.

The magnetization is given by,

M=χmHM=χmBμM=χmBcentre+Bsurfaceμ

Substituteμ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)for BcentreandAm forBsurfaceinto above equation.

M=χmμμ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+Am

M=χm4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+χmμAm …… (1)

The magnetization due to bound current Jbis given by,

Jb=×MJb=0

Because the first term curl less and second term is constant.

The expression for the surface charge density is given by,

Kb=M(R)×r^

From equation (1) and (2),

Kb=χm4πR3(m×r^)+Aχmμ(m×r^)

Kb=χmm14πR3+Aμsinθϕ^ ……. (3)

The surface current due to spinning sphere is given by,

K=σv

K=σωRsinθϕ^ …… (4)

From the equation (3) and (4).

σωR=χmm14πR3+Aμ

Filed produce by the surface current due for point inside the surface is given by,

Bsurfacecentre=23μ0(σωR)

Substitute χmm14πR3+Aμfor σωRinto above equation.

Bsurfacecentre=23μ0χmm14πR3+Aμ …… (5)

The equation (5) will be constant if,

A=23μ0χmm14πR3+AμA123μ0χmm=23μ0χm4πR3

Substitute μμ01for χminto above equation.

A123μ0μμμ01=23μ04πR3μμ01A123+23μ0μ=23(μμ0)4πR3A1+2μ0μ=23(μμ0)4πR3A=μ4π2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)

The magnetic field inside the surface is given by,

Bin=Bcentre+Bsuface

Substituteμ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)forBcentreand Am forBsurfaceinto above equation.

Bin=μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+Am

Substitute μ4π2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)for Ainto above equation.

Bin=μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+μ4π2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)mBin=μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)m

Hence the magnetic field inside the sphere is

μ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)m

The magnetic field outside the sphere due to surface current is given by,

B'surfacecentre=43πR3(σωR)

Substitute 32μ0Bsurfacefor σωRinto above equation.

B'surfacecentre=43πR332μ0Bsurfacecentre

Substitute 2μ4πR3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)mfor Bsurfaceinto above equation.

B'surfacecentre=43πR332μ02μ4πR3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)mB'surfacecentre=μμ0(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)m

The total dipole moment is given by,

mtot=μμ0m+μμ0mμ0μ2μ0+μmtot=3μm2μ0+μ

The field outside the sphere is given by,

Boutμ04πmtot1r3[3(mr^)r^m]

Substitute 3μm2μ0+μformtotinto above equation.

Bout=μ04π3μm2μ0+μ1r3[3(mr^)r^m]

Hence the filed inside the sphere isμ4π1r3(3(mr^)r^m)+2R3(μμ0)(2μ0+μ)m and outside the sphere isμ04π3μm2μ0+μ1r33(mr^)r^m .

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Question: Of the following materials, which would you expect to be paramagnetic and which diamagnetic: aluminum, copper, copper chloride (Cucl2), carbon, lead, nitrogen (N2), salt (Nacl ), sodium, sulfur, water? (Actually, copper is slightly diamagnetic; otherwise, they're all what you'd expect.)


In Prob. 6.4, you calculated the force on a dipole by "brute force." Here's a more elegant approach. First writeB(r)as a Taylor expansion about the center of the loop:

,B(r)B(r0)+[(rr0)0]B(r0)

Wherer0the position of the dipole and 0is denotes differentiation with respect tor0. Put this into the Lorentz force law (Eq. 5.16) to obtain

.F=IdI×[(r0)B(r0)]

Or, numbering the Cartesian coordinates from 1 to 3:

Fi=Ij,k,l=13εijk{rldlj}[0lBk(r0)],

Where εijk is the Levi-Civita symbol (+1ifijk=123,231, or312; 1ifijk=132, 213, or 321;0otherwise), in terms of which the cross-product can be written (A×B)i=j,k=13εijkAjBk. Use Eq. 1.108 to evaluate the integral. Note that

j=13εijkεljm=δilδkmδimδkl

Whereoil is the Kronecker delta (Prob. 3.52).




Derive Eq. 6.3. [Here's one way to do it: Assume the dipole is an infinitesimal square, of side E (if it's not, chop it up into squares, and apply the argument to each one). Choose axes as shown in Fig. 6.8, and calculate F = I J (dl x B) along each of the four sides. Expand B in a Taylor series-on the right side, for instance,

B=B(0,,z)B(0,0,Z)+By0.0.z

For a more sophisticated method, see Prob. 6.22.]

A current Iflows down a long straight wire of radius. If the wire is made of linear material (copper, say, or aluminium) with susceptibility Xm, and the current is distributed uniformly, what is the magnetic field a distances from the axis? Find all the bound currents. What is the net bound current flowing down the wire?

You are asked to referee a grant application, which proposes to determine whether the magnetization of iron is due to "Ampere" dipoles (current loops) or "Gilbert" dipoles (separated magnetic monopoles). The experiment will involve a cylinder of iron (radius Rand length L=10R), uniformly magnetized along the direction of its axis. If the dipoles are Ampere-type, the magnetization is equivalent to a surface bound current Kb=Mϕ^if they are Gilbert-type, the magnetization is equivalent to surface monopole densities σb=±Mat the two ends. Unfortunately, these two configurations produce identical magnetic fields, at exterior points. However, the interior fields are radically different-in the first case Bis in the same general direction as M, whereas in the second it is roughly opposite to M. The applicant proposes to measure this internal field by carving out a small cavity and finding the torque on a tiny compass needle placed inside.

Assuming that the obvious technical difficulties can be overcome, and that the question itself is worthy of study, would you advise funding this experiment? If so, what shape cavity would you recommend? If not, what is wrong with the proposal?

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