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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Explain how the Biot-Savart law is used to determine the magnetic field due to a thin, straight wire.
  • Determine the dependence of the magnetic field from a thin, straight wire based on the distance from it and the current flowing in the wire.
  • Sketch the magnetic field created from a thin, straight wire by using the second right-hand rule.

How much current is needed to produce a significant magnetic field, perhaps as strong as Earth’s field? Surveyors will tell you that overhead electric power lines create magnetic fields that interfere with their compass readings. Indeed, when Oersted discovered in 1820 that a current in a wire affected a compass needle, he was not dealing with extremely large currents. How does the shape of wires carrying current affect the shape of the magnetic field created? We noted in Chapter 28 that a current loop created a magnetic field similar to that of a bar magnet, but what about a straight wire? We can use the Biot-Savart law to answer all of these questions, including determining the magnetic field of a long straight wire.

[link] shows a section of an infinitely long, straight wire that carries a current I . What is the magnetic field at a point P , located a distance R from the wire?

This figure shows a section of a thin, straight current-carrying wire. Point P is located at distance R from the center of the wire O and at distance r from the piece of the wire dX. Vector r from the piece of the wire dX to the point P forms an angle theta with the wire.
A section of a thin, straight current-carrying wire. The independent variable θ has the limits θ 1 and θ 2 .

Let’s begin by considering the magnetic field due to the current element I d x located at the position x . Using the right-hand rule 1 from the previous chapter, d x × r ^ points out of the page for any element along the wire. At point P , therefore, the magnetic fields due to all current elements have the same direction. This means that we can calculate the net field there by evaluating the scalar sum of the contributions of the elements. With | d x × r ^ | = ( d x ) ( 1 ) sin θ , we have from the Biot-Savart law

B = μ 0 4 π wire I sin θ d x r 2 .

The wire is symmetrical about point O , so we can set the limits of the integration from zero to infinity and double the answer, rather than integrate from negative infinity to positive infinity. Based on the picture and geometry, we can write expressions for r and sin θ in terms of x and R , namely:

r = x 2 + R 2 sin θ = R x 2 + R 2 .

Substituting these expressions into [link] , the magnetic field integration becomes

B = μ o I 2 π 0 R d x ( x 2 + R 2 ) 3 / 2 .

Evaluating the integral yields

B = μ o I 2 π R [ x ( x 2 + R 2 ) 1 / 2 ] 0 .

Substituting the limits gives us the solution

B = μ o I 2 π R .

The magnetic field lines of the infinite wire are circular and centered at the wire ( [link] ), and they are identical in every plane perpendicular to the wire. Since the field decreases with distance from the wire, the spacing of the field lines must increase correspondingly with distance. The direction of this magnetic field may be found with a second form of the right-hand rule (illustrated in [link] ). If you hold the wire with your right hand so that your thumb points along the current, then your fingers wrap around the wire in the same sense as B .

This figure demonstrates the right-hand rule. The wire is held with the right hand so that the thumb points along the current. The fingers wrap around the wire in the same sense as the magnetic field.
Some magnetic field lines of an infinite wire. The direction of B can be found with a form of the right-hand rule.

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
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