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Torque experienced by a current loop placed in a uniform magnetic field


logearav

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Revered Members,

In my attachment, while measuring the angle between current element I(QR) and magnetic field B, they are going in clock wise direction that is from R to Q(shown in Red line), so it is (90 - Θ ) and while measuring the angle between current element I(SP) and B, they are going in anti clockwise direction that is from P to S(shown in Red line), so it is (90 + Θ).

May I get clarification from revered members as to why they have gone in different directions to measure the angle, instead of adopting the same direction, either clockwise or anti clockwise, for measuring the angle in the arms QR and SP?

My friend told, the reason is,Because they measure the angle according to the direction of current.

My query is

The current starts from the point P and terminates at Q(for the arm PQ) and similarly it starts from point S and terminates at P(for the arm SP), so what harm in measuring the angle from the starting point rather the terminating point of current in both the arms(PQ and SP)?

post-58372-0-06683600-1319334342_thumb.jpg

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Because you are using the cross product. F = I x B so you have to use the directions and angle that are defined by the equation. SP and QR are in opposite directions, so the different angles are defined by the cross product.

 

(etiquette tip: coloring entire passages, especially in that awful green, makes it hard to read. Highlighting is for words or short phrases)

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Thanks a lot swansont. Agreed, i am using cross product. My question is, why can't we measure the angle from Q to R in the arm QR and from S to P in the arm SP, instead of going the way as mentioned in my attachment?

 

You do measure that way. QR and SP. But QR is going to look like PS so the angle you use starts on the other side of the B vector.

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