Ampère's law
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In physics, Ampère's law, discovered by André-Marie Ampère, relates the circulating magnetic field in a closed loop to the electric current passing through the loop. It is the magnetic equivalent of Faraday's law of induction.
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[edit] Original Ampère's law
In its original form, Ampère's law relates the magnetic field to its source, the current density
:
where
is the closed line integral around contour (closed curve) C.
is the magnetic field in amperes per metre.
is an infinitesimal element (differential) of the contour C,
is the current density (in amperes per square meter) through the surface S enclosed by contour C
is a differential vector area element of surface S, with infinitesimally small magnitude and direction normal to surface S,
is the current enclosed by the curve C, or strictly, the current that penetrates surface S.
Equivalently, the original equation in differential form is
where
is the curl operator.
The magnetic field in linear media, is related to the magnetic flux density
(in teslas) by
where is the permeability of the medium (in henries per meter), which by definition is
in free space. In non-linear media,
is a rank-2 tensor.
[edit] Corrected Ampère's law: the Ampère-Maxwell equation
James Clerk Maxwell noticed a logical inconsistency when applying Ampère's law to a charging or discharging capacitor. If surface S passes between the plates of the capacitor, and not through any wires, then even though
. He concluded that this law had to be incomplete. To resolve the problem, he came up with the concept of displacement current and made a generalized version of Ampère's law which was incorporated into Maxwell's equations.
The generalized law, as corrected by Maxwell, takes the following integral form:
where in linear media
is the displacement flux density (in coulombs per square meter).
This Ampère-Maxwell law can also be stated in differential form:
where the second term arises from the displacement current.
With the addition of the displacement current, Maxwell was able to postulate (correctly) that light was a form of electromagnetic wave. See Electromagnetic wave equation for a discussion on this important discovery.
[edit] See also
- Maxwell's equations
- Biot-Savart law
- Faraday's law of induction
- Gauss's law
- Electric current
- Vector calculus
- Stokes' theorem
[edit] References
- Griffiths, David J. (1998). Introduction to Electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 013805326X.
- Tipler, Paul (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Electricity, Magnetism, Light, and Elementary Modern Physics (5th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 0716708108.
[edit] External links
- a section on Ampere's law from an online textbook
- MISN-0-138 Ampere's Law (PDF file) by Kirby Morgan for Project PHYSNET.
- MISN-0-145 The Ampere-Maxwell Equation; Displacement Current (PDF file) by J.S. Kovacs for Project PHYSNET.
- The Ampère's Law Song (PDF file) by Walter Fox Smith; Main page, with recordings of the song.