LORENTZ FORCE

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Lorentz force.

In physics, the 'Lorentz force' is the force exerted on a charged particle in an electromagnetic field. The particle will experience a force due to electric field of ''q'''E', and due to the magnetic field ''q'''v' × 'B'. Combined they give the Lorentz force equation (or law):
: mathbf{F} = q (mathbf{E} + mathbf{v} imes mathbf{B}),
where
:'F' is the force (in newtons)
:'E' is the electric field (in volts per meter)
:'B' is the magnetic field (in teslas)
:''q'' is the electric charge of the particle (in coulombs)
:'v' is the instantaneous velocity of the particle (in meters per second)
:and × is the cross product.
Thus a positively charged particle will be accelerated in the ''same'' linear orientation as the 'E' field, but will curve perpendicularly to both the instantaneous velocity vector 'v' and the 'B' field according to the right-hand rule (''i.e.'', if the thumb of the right hand points along 'v' and the index finger along 'B', then the middle finger points along 'F').

Contents
The Significance of the Lorentz Force
Lorentz force in special relativity
Covariant form of the Lorentz force
Derivation
Applications
See also
References
External links

The Significance of the Lorentz Force


The Lorentz force is one of the original eight Maxwell's equations (equation D) and it is the solution to the differential form of Faraday's Law. Nowadays, Faraday's law is used instead of the Lorentz force in Maxwell's equations. Faraday's law and the Lorentz force both express the same physics. The discovery of the Lorentz force was before Lorentz's time. It can be seen at equation (77) in Maxwell's 1861 paper On Physical Lines of Force.lorenz force is a force experienced by a conductor due to the presence of a current carrying conductor.

Lorentz force in special relativity


When particle speeds approach the speed of light, the Lorentz force equation must be modified according to special relativity:
: {d left ( gamma m mathbf{v}
ight ) over dt } = mathbf{F} = q (mathbf{E} + mathbf{v} imes mathbf{B}),
where
:gamma stackrel{mathrm{def}}{=} rac{1}{sqrt{1 - rac{|mathbf{v}|^2}{c^2}}}
is called the Lorentz factor and c is the speed of light in a vacuum.
This relativistic form is identical to the conventional expression of the Lorentz force if the momentum form of Newton's law, F= dp/dt, is used, and the momentum p is assumed to be p = gamma mv.
The change of energy due to the electric and magnetic fields, in relativistic form, is simply
: {d left ( gamma m c^2
ight ) over dt } = q mathbf{E} cdot mathbf{v} .
The change in energy depends only on the electric field, and not on the magnetic field.

Covariant form of the Lorentz force


Main articles: Formulation of Maxwell's equations in special relativity

The Lorentz force equation can be written in covariant form in terms of the field strength tensor.
:: rac{d p^lpha}{d au} = q u_eta F^{lpha eta}
:where
:: au is c times the proper time of the particle,
::''q'' is the charge,
::''u'' is the 4-velocity of the particle, defined as:
::u_eta = left(u_0, u_1, u_2, u_3
ight) = gamma left(c, v_x, v_y, v_z
ight) ,and
::''F'' is the field strength tensor (or electromagnetic tensor) and is written in terms of fields as:
::F^{lpha eta} = egin{bmatrix}
0 & -E_x/c & -E_y/c & -E_z/c \
E_x/c & 0 & -B_z & B_y \
E_y/c & B_z & 0 & -B_x \
E_z/c & -B_y & B_x & 0
end{bmatrix}
.
The fields are transformed to a frame moving with constant relative velocity by:
: cute{F}^{mu
u} = {Lambda^{mu}}_{lpha} {Lambda^{
u}}_{eta} F^{lpha eta}
,
where {Lambda^{mu}}_{lpha}
is a Lorentz transformation.
Derivation

The mu =1 component (x-component) of the force is
:: gamma rac{d p^1}{d t} = rac{d p^1}{d au} = q u_eta F^{1 eta} = qleft(-u^0 F^{10} + u^1 F^{11} + u^2 F^{12} + u^3 F^{13}
ight) .,
Here, au is the proper time of the particle. Substituting the components of the electromagnetic tensor ''F'' yields
:: gamma rac{d p^1}{d t} = q left(-u^0 left( rac{-E_x}{c}
ight) + u^2 (B_z) + u^3 (-B_y)
ight) ,
Writing the four-velocity in terms of the ordinary velocity yields
:: gamma rac{d p^1}{d t} = q gamma left(c left( rac{E_x}{c}
ight) + v_y B_z - v_z B_y
ight) ,
:: gamma rac{d p^1}{d t} = q gamma left( E_x + left(mathbf{v} imes mathbf{B}
ight)_x
ight) .,
The calculation of the mu = 2 or mu = 3 is similar yielding
:: gamma rac{d mathbf{p} }{d t} = rac{d mathbf{p} }{d au} = q gamma left(mathbf{E} + (mathbf{v} imes mathbf{B})
ight) ,,
which is the Lorentz force law.

Applications


The Lorentz force is a principle exploited in many devices including:

Cyclotrons and other circular path particle accelerators

Homopolar generators

Magnetrons

Magnetoplasmadynamic thrusters

Mass spectrometers

★ Velocity Filter
The Lorentz force can also act on a current carrying conductor, in this case called Laplace Force, by the interaction of the conduction electrons with the atoms of the conductor material. This force is used in many devices including :

Railguns

Electrical generators

Electric motors

See also



Electromagnetism

Gravitomagnetism

Hendrik Lorentz

Maxwell's equations

Formulation of Maxwell's equations in special relativity

Moving magnet and conductor problem

Abraham-Lorentz force

References



Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, Serway and Jewett, , , Thomson Brooks/Cole, 2004, ISBN 0-534-40846-X

The Feynman Lectures on Physics The Definitive Edition Volume II, Feynman, Leighton and Sands, , , Pearson Addison Wesley, 2006, ISBN 0-8053-9047-2

External links



Lorentz force (animation)

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