On Wed, 22 May 2013 14:02:14 -0700, Timo Nieminen wrote:
> On Thursday, 23 May 2013 02:37:06 UTC+10, benj wrote:
>> On Tue, 21 May 2013 21:57:15 -0700, Timo Nieminen wrote:
>> > On Wednesday, May 22, 2013 12:29:08 PM UTC+10, benj wrote:
> The long solenoid doesn't have zero field outside. Flux inside is BA,
> flux outside is -BA. So, you were just wrong then, not over-idealising.
Your case only matters if you are integrating over all space. If you are
close to the solenoid fields are minimal if you aren't near the ends.
Fields creating forces on charges are NEAR the solenoid. Sure it's not
"ideal" but it makes the point. You are over-idealizing. A toroid
idealizes the situation but really works little different from a long
solenoid in any practical case. Practical isn't what you are doing.
> It's very simple. You specified a good conductor, and even offered the
> alternative of a superconductor. You said it keeps all external E fields
> out.
>
> Basically, you have imagined some B field energy in a closed box. It
> can't go anywhere. If you turn the driving voltage off, it provides it's
> own to sustain the current to maintain the B field. Infinite inductance.
Yes, it's what happens when you have a superconducting coil. But you seem
to have forgotten that part of the experiment is to let the coil heat up
so it loses it's superconducting nature. Then the Energy in the B fields
gets out and inductance is no longer "infinite".
> Could it be that a closed good/super conductor is a very poor model of a
> toroidal solenoid? Try a realistic model instead.
There's nothing wrong with this model. It's a well-understood device.
>> Of course the electric field driving the charges is created NOT by the
>> B fields but by it's derivative! So if you mean "after" then he answer
>> is nothing happens as the emf depends on the rate of change of B and
>> not it's value. If you mean "while" then "obviously" an E field is
>> created and the charges turn.
>
> "Obviously" again. Do the calculation.
Let's see. I think even someone working on a GED like me can do this...
(invoke symmetry)
emf = Pi d E (d = diameter of hoop) Hence E = emf/(Pi d)
Tangential Force on charge = q E so F = (q emf)/(pi d)
torque = F x R so T = (q emf (d/2) )/(pi d) = q emf/2 pi
Since you'd rather calculate than think, here's an exercise for the
interested student.
In the above case with either a "long" solenoid or toroid of n turns per
unit length with a cylinder bearing a total charge q and of mass m either
just inside or just outside the coil find the final angular velocity of
the charged cylinder after the current is switched on and goes from zero
to a final value I?
Teacher's Answerbook: w = - mu (qnI)/2m (unit vector in axis direction)
Note minus sign means rotation is opposite to direction of current.
Good luck!
>> > Sometimes it is worth trying to do the actual calculation, not just
>> > say "obviously ...".
>>
>> Obvious to me. See if the calculations don't agree.
>
> Mine don't. You're not provided any. All you've provided so far has been
> errors and unphysical models and "obviously". Can you offer something of
> more substance?
>
>> >> And as the hoop gets close to wall B stays same but E gets very
>> >> large to compensate for smaller volume. Right?
>> >
>> > Wrong. Why does the E field of a charged hoop care about an exterior
>> > wall (in the space inside the wall)?
>>
>> How does the magnitude of the E field from charges vary with distance
>> from them?
>
> If the charged hoop is close to wall, and is expanded so that the
> distance to the wall is halved, the field does not double as required by
> your assumption. Again, sometimes doing the calculation is better than
> declaring "obvisouly" and assuming the desired result.
>
> For the exact result for a thing ring,
>
http://unapologetic.wordpress.com/2012/01/10/charged-rings-and-planes/
Interesting result. Only calculation is for Z direction not radial.
Radial result is same as Coulomb's law for distances greater than R.
Anyway, if the field between the wall and hoop (lets say cylinder shall
we?) does not represent increased fields then the angular momentum must
be also stored in fields inside the cylinder. The point being that the
angular momentum stored in the E x B fields cannot depend on the diameter
of the charged cylinder... or does it? AM stored in fields is same
whether hoop turns or not, right?
>> This is not our situation! We have a coil (Faraday shield) not a
>> conducting tube. Not the same!
>
> So why talk about a closed conducting container?
because you were saying the electrostatic fields from the external
charges finds it's way inside the coil. This is not true for THOSE
fields. Electrokinetic fields (emf) however do appear about all current
elements.
> If you were thinking of something different, provide the mathematical
> model and solution.
Actually the point is to FIND the mathematical model and solution.
> So what do we have? If it isn't a closed conducting tube, why did you
> bother with "What's the static E field inside a closed conducting
> container [...]?" If we don't have a closed conducting container, isn't
> that just an irrelevant red herring? But you were basing your argument
> on it!
You've got me cornered. Here's what I'm trying to do. I want to try to
set up a situation where there is clearly stored angular momentum yet no
place where there is both static B and static E fields needed to store
that momentum. Note that it is STATIC fields that store momentum the
induced fields are all zero for this.
Thus, if we have a cylinder inside the coil clearly there is both static
E (from charges) and static B (from steady current in coil) in there and
the Poynting energy is circulating. (radial E and axis B) Hence A M can
be stored. But if the cylinder is outside the coil now B is all (mostly)
inside the coil and E is (mostly) outside. If some E leaks in that is
irrelevant because the torque does not change significantly between the
two positions. Hence there is a problem.
Where this is trying to go is that while we know that the amount of
linear momentum stored in a region of space is the integral of E x H over
that volume. But one can show that the amount of linear momentum stored
in space is given by G = q A where A is the magnetic vector potential.
Since B is zero outside the coil that means A is a constant. So where
this is headed is that while B is zero outside, A is not. There is plenty
of A out where the charge, q, is located. In fact, the value of A just
outside the coil is the same as A just inside it. Furthermore, the
momentum is in the direction of A which is circulating about the coil and
hence represents stored Angular Momentum!
This is what I was hoping you'd come up with without any prodding by me.
But nevertheless the exact relationships aren't completely clear here.
> You claimed that the solenoid stops external E fields from getting in,
> but magically lets the internal induced E field out.
Correct. Two different E fields with different properties!
>> Are you saying that transformers can't work when there is a Faraday
>> shield between the primary and secondary? I don't think so.
>
> Are you saying Faraday shields only work one-way? I don't think so.
I'm saying they only work for one type of E field. But I'm trying NOT to
get off on that tangent now. Transformers clearly work whether the
secondary is inside or outside the primary. Our charged "hoop" is really
just an exotic secondary winding.