How Does Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Induce EMF in Brain Tissue?

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Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a noninvasive method that stimulates brain regions using a coil to create a rapidly changing magnetic field, inducing electromotive force (emf) that activates neurons. A specific device generates an upward magnetic field of 1.50 T in 125 ms, resulting in an induced emf of 109 µV in a circular area of brain tissue with a radius of 1.70 mm. The discussion also explores how a downward change to 0.500 T in 95.0 ms affects the induced emf. Participants reference Faraday's Law to calculate induced electric fields and emf, emphasizing the need for practical examples to enhance understanding. The conversation highlights the importance of applying theoretical principles to solve electromagnetic problems effectively.
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Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a noninvasive technique used to stimulate regions of the human brain. In TMS, a small coil is placed on the scalp and a brief burst of current in the coil produces a rapidly changing magnetic field inside the brain. The induced emf can stimulate neuronal activity.
(a) One such device generates an upward magnetic field within the brain that rises from zero to 1.50 T in 125 ms. Determine the induced emf around a horizontal circle of tissue of radius 1.70 mm.
magnitude 109 µV


(b) The field next changes to 0.500 T downward in 95.0 ms. How does the emf induced in this process co

A long solenoid with 6.50 102 turns per meter and radius 2.00 cm carries an oscillating current I = 3.00 sin 90πt, where I is in amperes and t is in seconds.
(a) What is the electric field induced at a radius r = 1.00 cm from the axis of the solenoid? (Use the following as necessary: t. Let E be measured in millivolts/meter and t be measured in seconds.)
E=?

any help.
 
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Well what have you tried so far to solve these?

Remember Maxwell's equations; they are the tools you'll need to solve most E&M problems at this level. Specifically, Faraday's Law will help with part (a).
 
can anyone help be out?
 
hmm apparently my hint wasn't help...

Faraday's law: E \cdot dl = -\frac{d\Phi}{dt}
You know dl, and can calculate the change in flux, so you can solve for E...
 
im sorry I am still not getting it. can you show me with an example? like use different values or something then i could do it on my own. maybe its just me but that is how i learn.
 
imapeiceofwod said:
im sorry I am still not getting it. can you show me with an example? like use different values or something then i could do it on my own. maybe its just me but that is how i learn.

Faraday says:
emf = - \frac {d\Phi} {dt}

In other words:
V = - \frac {\Delta B \times A} {\Delta t} = - \frac {\Delta B \times \pi r^2} {\Delta t}

Can you apply this formula?
 
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