Electrodynamics/Biot-Savart Law

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Biot-Savart Law

The Biot-Savart law relates the magnetic B field to the distances and strengths of magnets in the field. In many respects, it's very similar to Coulomb's law, both in form and concept.

We can state the Biot-Savart Law as:

Template:Eqn

d𝐁=KmIdπ₯×𝐫^r2

Where:

Km=μ04π, where μ0 is the magnetic constant
I is the current, measured in amperes
dπ₯ is the differential length vector of the current element
𝐫^ is the unit displacement vector from the current element to the field point and
r is the distance from the current element to the field point

Forms

General

In the magnetostatic approximation, the magnetic field can be determined if the current density j is known:

𝐁=Km𝐣×𝐫^r2dv

where

𝐫^=𝐫r is the unit vector in the direction of r.
dv = is the differential unit of volume.

Constant uniform current

In the special case of a constant, uniform current I, the magnetic field B is

𝐁=KmIdπ₯×𝐫^r2

Point charge at constant velocity

In the special case of a charged point particle q moving at a constant velocity 𝐯, then the equation above reduces to a magnetic field of the form:

𝐁=Kmq𝐯×𝐫^r2

Microscopic Scale

On the microscopic scale, the Biot-Savart law becomes,

𝐇=ϵ𝐯×𝐄

and hence,

𝐁=𝐯×1c2𝐄