- #1
gibberingmouther
- 120
- 15
- Homework Statement
- What is the B field in component form in the reference frame of the rocket which is moving through a static E field?
- Relevant Equations
- E = v x B
This problem seems pretty simple but I don't understand how the correct answer is 500,000 smaller than what I calculated.
You have an electric field that has a magnitude of 10^6 V/m in the positive z direction. I assumed (though it was not stated) that the cause of this field was a sheet of charges whose plane is oriented parallel to the xy plane.
A rocket moves in the positive x direction at 10^6 m/s. The question is:
"What are the components of the magnetic field in the reference frame of the rocket?"
The answer is 1.1 * 10^-5 T in the positive y direction. I get the direction from the right hand rule, but I calculated that B in the positive y direction is the electric field divided by the velocity of the rocket which would give you 1 T, not 500,000 times smaller than that.
Can anyone tell me what I'm missing here? Thanks.
You have an electric field that has a magnitude of 10^6 V/m in the positive z direction. I assumed (though it was not stated) that the cause of this field was a sheet of charges whose plane is oriented parallel to the xy plane.
A rocket moves in the positive x direction at 10^6 m/s. The question is:
"What are the components of the magnetic field in the reference frame of the rocket?"
The answer is 1.1 * 10^-5 T in the positive y direction. I get the direction from the right hand rule, but I calculated that B in the positive y direction is the electric field divided by the velocity of the rocket which would give you 1 T, not 500,000 times smaller than that.
Can anyone tell me what I'm missing here? Thanks.