10 Solved Numericals on Moving Charges and Magnetism
NCERT Chapter 4 • Practice Problems with Step-by-Step Solutions
1. Lorentz Force on Moving Charge
Problem: An electron moving with a speed of 5.0 × 10⁶ m/s enters a uniform magnetic field of 0.2 T at an angle of 30° with the field direction. Calculate the magnitude of the magnetic force acting on the electron. (Charge of electron e = 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ C)
Magnitude of magnetic force:
Using right-hand rule (for positive charge) and reversing for electron (negative charge), force direction is perpendicular to both velocity and magnetic field vectors.
2. Radius of Circular Path in Magnetic Field
Problem: A proton enters a uniform magnetic field of 0.5 T perpendicular to the field direction with a kinetic energy of 1.6 × 10⁻¹³ J. Calculate the radius of the circular path described by the proton. (Mass of proton = 1.67 × 10⁻²⁷ kg, charge = 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ C)
For perpendicular motion (
3. Helical Motion of Charged Particle
Problem: An electron with speed 4.0 × 10⁶ m/s enters a uniform magnetic field of 0.3 T at an angle of 60° with the field direction. Calculate (a) the radius of the helical path, (b) the pitch of the helix, and (c) the time period of revolution. (mₑ = 9.1 × 10⁻³¹ kg, e = 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ C)
Parallel component:
Perpendicular component:
Time period:
Pitch:
4. Biot-Savart Law: Field Due to Current Element
Problem: A current element of length 2 cm carrying a current of 10 A is placed along the x-axis with its center at the origin. Calculate the magnetic field at a point (0, 2 m, 0) using Biot-Savart law. (μ₀/4π = 10⁻⁷ Tm/A)
Magnitude:
Using right-hand rule: dl along +x, r along +y ⇒ dl × r along +z direction
Therefore, magnetic field is along positive z-axis.
5. Magnetic Field on Axis of Circular Loop
Problem: A circular coil of radius 10 cm has 50 turns and carries a current of 2 A. Calculate the magnetic field at a point on its axis at a distance of (a) 0 cm (center), and (b) 15 cm from the center of the coil.
6. Ampere’s Circuital Law: Field Due to Straight Wire
Problem: A long straight wire carries a current of 25 A. Calculate the magnitude of magnetic field at a perpendicular distance of (a) 5 cm, and (b) 10 cm from the wire. Also find the direction of the field at these points.
For infinite straight wire:
Using right-hand thumb rule: Grasp wire with thumb pointing in current direction; fingers curl in direction of magnetic field (tangential to concentric circles).
7. Magnetic Field Inside a Solenoid
Problem: A solenoid 0.8 m long has 2000 turns and carries a current of 3.0 A. Calculate (a) the magnetic field inside the solenoid near its center, and (b) the magnetic moment of the solenoid if its cross-sectional area is 4 cm².
Turns per unit length:
Total magnetic moment:
Direction: Along axis following right-hand rule (curl fingers in current direction, thumb gives m direction)
8. Force Between Parallel Current-Carrying Conductors
Problem: Two long parallel conductors are 10 cm apart and carry currents of 15 A and 25 A respectively in the same direction. Calculate the force per unit length experienced by each conductor. Is the force attractive or repulsive?
Force per unit length:
Since currents are in the same direction, the force is attractive.
(Parallel currents attract, antiparallel currents repel)
Force on conductor 1 due to 2 = Force on conductor 2 due to 1 =
Equal in magnitude, opposite in direction (attractive)
9. Torque on Current Loop in Uniform Magnetic Field
Problem: A rectangular coil of 100 turns, 8 cm × 5 cm, carries a current of 2 A. It is placed in a uniform magnetic field of 0.4 T such that its plane makes an angle of 30° with the field direction. Calculate the torque experienced by the coil.
Area:
Angle between magnetic field B and normal to coil plane = θ
Given: Plane makes 30° with field ⇒ Normal makes θ = 90° – 30° = 60° with field
Magnetic moment:
Torque:
10. Moving Coil Galvanometer Sensitivity
Problem: A moving coil galvanometer has a coil of 50 turns, each of area 3 × 10⁻⁴ m², suspended in a radial magnetic field of 0.2 T. The torsional constant of the spring is 2 × 10⁻⁴ Nm/rad. Calculate (a) the current sensitivity, and (b) the voltage sensitivity of the galvanometer.
Defined as deflection per unit current:
(Assuming 1 rad ≈ 57.3° and scale calibrated accordingly)
First find coil resistance (assume typical value for calculation):
For galvanometer coil:
Voltage sensitivity:
• Current sensitivity depends on N, A, B and k
• Voltage sensitivity = Current sensitivity / Resistance
• Increasing N increases current sensitivity but also increases R, so voltage sensitivity may not increase proportionally
• Always resolve velocity into components parallel (v∥) and perpendicular (v⊥) to B for helical motion
• For circular motion: centripetal force = magnetic force ⇒ mv²/r = qvB ⇒ r = mv/qB
• Magnetic force does NO WORK (always perpendicular to velocity) ⇒ kinetic energy remains constant
• For Biot-Savart law: dB ∝ I·dl·sinθ/r²; direction by right-hand rule for cross product
• Ampere’s law useful for symmetric current distributions (straight wire, solenoid, toroid)
• Parallel currents ATTRACT; antiparallel currents REPEL (opposite to electrostatic behavior)
• Torque on loop: τ = m × B where m = NIA (magnetic moment)
