THERMOMAGNETIC CONVECTION OF FERROFLUID IN NON-UNIFORM MAGNETIC FIELD ARROUND A CURRENT CARRYING WIRE

Author(s):  
Ashkan Vatani ◽  
Peter Woodfield ◽  
Nam-Trung Nguyen ◽  
D. Dao
2013 ◽  
Vol 770 ◽  
pp. 374-377
Author(s):  
Apichart Sankote ◽  
Kheamrutai Thamaphat ◽  
Supanee Limsuwan

In this work, a method to measuring the magnitude of a uniform magnetic field in space using current balance was described. A simple experimental set was designed and constructed using low-cost materials. This constructed current balance consists of copper sheet, weight pan, and acrylic sheet. A copper sheet was cut into a U-shape and attached at the end of acrylic balance arm. A weight pan was hanged in the opposite side of the balance arm with high sensitivity to a small torque. The horizontal segment of the U-shaped copper sheet, which the length l was 3 cm, was located inside the influence of an uniform magnetic field produced by two parallel bar magnets with opposite poles facing each other. The magnetic field direction was perpendicular to the horizontal segment. When a current was supplied to the copper sheet, the magnetic force acting on a horizontal segment of length l carrying a current I in a magnetic field B was given by. In the experiment, the current was varied from 0 1 A. For each value of applied current, the magnetic force on a thin straight sheet of length l was measured by adding masses to the pan until the balance arm moved to the equilibrium between opposing gravitational and magnetic forces. The results showed that the magnetic force increased linearly with increasing applied current. By plotting a linear graph of magnetic force versus applied current, the magnetic field B can be calculated from . The calculated and actual values of B were 100.32 and 100.13 mT, respectively. This constructed current balance is an excellent tool for high school and undergraduate fundamental physics courses. Students will be excited when they see the balance arm rising or going down due to magnitude and direction of current flowing in a conductor wire.


1970 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 785-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E. Loper ◽  
Edward R. Benton

The linear spin-up of a homogeneous electrically conducting fluid confined between infinite flat insulating plates is analyzed for the case in which a uniform magnetic field is applied normal to the boundaries. As in part 1 (Benton & Loper 1969), complete hydromagnetic interaction is embraced even within linearized equations. Approximate inversion of the exact Laplace transform solution reveals the presence of several flow structures: two thin Ekman–Hartmann boundary layers (one on each plate), which are quasi-steady on the time scale of spin-up, two thicker continuously growing magnetic diffusion regions, and an essentially inviscid, current-free core, which may or may not be present on the spin-up time scale, depending upon the growth rate of the magnetic diffusion regions. When a current-free core exists, it is found to spin-up at the same rate as the fluid within magnetic diffusion regions, although different physical mechanisms are at play. As a result, a single hydromagnetic spin-up time is derived, independently of the thickness of magnetic diffusion regions; this time is shorter than in the non-magnetic problem.


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