- #1
Terawatt
- 3
- 0
Hello,
I've been trying to puzzle this one out and even the mighty internet has not been particularly helpful, so here goes:
Say you have a current carrying copper wire perpendicular to a magnetic field. Let's give some values for clarity: the length of the wire is 1m, the current is 3A, and the magnetic field is 2T. The Lorentz (Laplace) force on that wire should be F = Il x B. In our case, F = 3A * 1m * 2T for a total of 6N of force in a direction given by my favorite, the right hand rule.
Ok, that makes sense to me. Now, say instead of a copper wire, you substitute in a superconducting wire (operating in its superconducting regime) with the same values. Will there still be a 6N force on that wire? I am confused because, as I understand it, the Meissner effect expels the magnetic field from the interior of a superconductor. So, is the current in the wire still feeling the magnetic field or is it now "immune" to it? Is there no force on the superconducting wire, a reduced force, or still the same 6N force? Relatedly, does the proximity to the critical temperature and critical current density have any affect on the answer?
I'd appreciate any helpful insight, particularly if you could explain in detail why (or why not) the superconducting wire has a force on it.
Regards,
Terawatt
I've been trying to puzzle this one out and even the mighty internet has not been particularly helpful, so here goes:
Say you have a current carrying copper wire perpendicular to a magnetic field. Let's give some values for clarity: the length of the wire is 1m, the current is 3A, and the magnetic field is 2T. The Lorentz (Laplace) force on that wire should be F = Il x B. In our case, F = 3A * 1m * 2T for a total of 6N of force in a direction given by my favorite, the right hand rule.
Ok, that makes sense to me. Now, say instead of a copper wire, you substitute in a superconducting wire (operating in its superconducting regime) with the same values. Will there still be a 6N force on that wire? I am confused because, as I understand it, the Meissner effect expels the magnetic field from the interior of a superconductor. So, is the current in the wire still feeling the magnetic field or is it now "immune" to it? Is there no force on the superconducting wire, a reduced force, or still the same 6N force? Relatedly, does the proximity to the critical temperature and critical current density have any affect on the answer?
I'd appreciate any helpful insight, particularly if you could explain in detail why (or why not) the superconducting wire has a force on it.
Regards,
Terawatt