[12 marks]
Encircle all the true completions of the sentence:
The temperature of an isolated system
i.
always increases as the energy of the system increases.
Usually true, but not always.
Consider the case of N spins in a magnetic field.
ii.
always increases as the entropy of the system increases.
Likewise.
iii.
always decreases as the entropy of the system increases.
Usually not true.
iv.
v.
is higher if adding energy to the system
increases its entropy more.
This applies to
1/T = dS/dU, not to T.
vi.
(b)
[10 marks]
A proton is initially moving perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field
.
A uniform electric field
is then applied parallel to the magnetic field.
Briefly describe the subsequent motion of the proton
in words and/or with a simple sketch.
ANSWER: It will accelerate in the direction (along the fields)
while continuing to move in a circle in the y-z plane.
Thus the path is a ``stretched spiral'' of constant radius
and steadily increasing pitch.
1.5in
(c)
[8 marks]
Shown below are four types of calculation problems and four ``Laws''
of Electricity and Magnetism. Match up (with connecting lines)
each problem with the Law you should use to solve it with.
5.5in
(Gauss' Law cannot be used on a finite line of charge.)
(d)
[10 marks]
A cube 1 m on a side completely surrounds an electric dipole
consisting of a positive electric charge of 1 C located
10 cm away from an equal-magnitude negative charge.
What is the average value, taken over the whole surface of the cube,
of the electric field normal to the surface?
Explain your answer.
ANSWER: Gauss' Law says that the integral of En, the normal component of
the electric field, over any closed surface is proportional to the net
charge within, in this case zero. The average En is the integral
of En over the surface divided by the net surface area, so it
is also .
(e)
[10 marks]
The capacitor in the circuit shown is initially charged to
where
is the voltage on the battery.
Describe in detail what happens when the switch is closed.
1.5in
ANSWER: .
The capacitor is already fully charged.
(f)
[10 marks]
The initially uncharged capacitor (C = 1 F)
is in series with a battery whose voltage is
V
and a resistor (
).
Describe in detail what happens when the switch is closed.
1.25in
ANSWER: Initially, the uncharged capacitor looks like a short;
a current flows through the resistor
as if C weren't there. Then, as charge builds up on C,
it ``pushes back'' more and more, slowing down I until
the charge on the capacitor approaches
asymptotically. The time constant is RC = 100 s.
If you like formulae, and
. I won't bother to
make sketches, but they are just as good as formulae;
better, really.
2.
COAXIAL CABLE [20 marks]
A net current of I=1 A
flows down a long, thin central wire and back along a long,
thin-walled cylindrical outer conductor of radius R=1 cm, as shown.
The returning current density is uniformly distributed
over the outer conducting shell.
1.0in
(a)
[5 marks]
In what direction is the vector magnetic field
in various regions?
(Indicate on the sketch and/or in words.)
ANSWER: By symmetry, the magnetic field lines must always be circles
perpendicular to the axis of the cylinder and centred on the
inner wire. Inside the shell the field points in the direction
of the fingers of your right hand when your thumb points along
the current on the wire. Outside the shell the field is zero,
because the total current through any Ampèrian loop around
the outside is zero.
(b)
[10 marks]
Find a complete expression for the magnetic field strength B
as a function of r (the distance from the central axis),
I and R.
ANSWER: As mentioned above, Ampère's Law gives
because there is the same current flowing in both directions
through an Ampèrian loop outside the outer shell.
Inside the shell, the ``return'' current has no effect because
it does not ``link the loop'', so we get the same answer
as if there were just the inner wire: or
. A lot of people
turned in nice solutions for more complicated problems,
presumably because they didn't read the question carefully
and/or because of the ``hammer/nail syndrome'' (the homework
problem being the ``hammer'' you have learned to use, every
other Ampère's Law problem then looking like a ``nail'').
(c)
[5 marks] PlotB(r) from r=0 to r=2R,
labelling your axes clearly (including the vertical scale in Tesla
and the horizontal scale in metres).
3.0in
3.
HOT CHARGE [20 marks]
A capacitor is made from two parallel metal plates 10 cm apart.
Each plate is a square 1 m on a side.
There is a charge of +Q on one plate and -Q on the other plate,
where
Q=10-11 C.
A tiny glass bead containing a single excess electron
(which we will assume is ``stuck'' in the bead)
is free to move between the plates; let x
be its distance away from the positive plate.
The bead is in thermal equilibrium
with the surrounding air at T=300 K.
Assume that the air is perfectly still (no air currents)
and neglect any effects of gravity.
(a)
[5 marks]
What is the potential energy of the bead as a function of x,
if we define its potential energy to be zero at x=0?
ANSWER: There is a uniform electric field V/m between the plates, so the force on a charge -e
is N
pulling it toward the positively charged plate.
This is analogous to the force of gravity at the Earth's surface.
To ``lift'' the bead a ``height'' x ``above'' the positive plate,
takes Fx worth of work and raises the potential energy of the bead
by . This is the answer.
or
[m].
(b)
[5 marks]
If you were to take into account the small but finite
dielectric constant of the air between the capacitor plates,
would the
potential energy of the bead get larger or smaller
at the same nonzero x position?
Explain. (No credit for a guess.)
ANSWER: A dielectric increases the capacitance of a capacitor, which then
requires less applied voltage to store the same charge; turning
this around, with a given charge on it the capacitor will have a
smaller voltage drop across it (and therefore a smaller electric
field inside, since the plate separation has not changed) and
therefore a weaker force on the charged bead. The bead's
potential energy will therefore be slightly
due to the air. Very slightly.
(c)
[10 marks]
What is the ratio of
the probability of finding the bead
exactly halfway between the plates (x=5 cm)
to the probability of finding it
touching the positive plate (x=0)?
ANSWER: Boltzmann says the probability of finding a microsystem in a state
of energy is proportional to
if the system is in thermal equilibrium with a big heat reservoir
at temperature T. This is such a situation, where the microsystem
in question is just the bead's distance from the positive plate.
So where we
don't know the normalizing constant c. But we don't need to
know it to calculate a ratio of probabilities:
or .