A person with body resistance between his hands of 10 k Ω accidentally grasps the terminals of a 14-kV power supply.
(a). If the internal resistance of the power supply is 2000 Ω, what is the current through the person’s body?
(b). What is the power dissipated in his body?
(c). If the power supply is to be made safe by increasing its internal resistance, what should the internal resistance be for the maximum current in the above situation to be 1.00 mA or less?
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.47 each capacitor initially has a charge of magnitude 3.50 nC on its plates. After the switch S is closed, what will be the current in the circuit at the instant that the capacitors have lost 80.0% of their initial stored
> A resistor and a capacitor are connected in series to an emf source. The time constant for the circuit is 0.780 s. (a). A second capacitor, identical to the first, is added in series. What is the time constant for this new circuit? (b). In the original
> An emf source with
> A 12.4-µF capacitor is connected through a 0.895-M resistor to a constant potential difference of 60.0 V. (a). Compute the charge on the capacitor at the following times after the connections are made: 0, 5.0 s, 10.0 s, 20.0 s, and 100.0 s. (b). Comput
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.43 both capacitors are initially charged to 45.0 V. Fig. E26.43: (a). How long after closing the switch S will the potential across each capacitor be reduced to 10.0 V, and (b). what will be the current at that time?
> A resistor consists of three identical metal strips connected as shown in Fig. Q26.8. If one of the strips is cut out, does the ammeter reading increase, decrease, or stay the same? Why? Fig. Q26.8: A
> The resistance of a galvanometer coil is 25.0 Ω, and the current required for full-scale deflection is 500 µA. (a). Show in a diagram how to convert the galvanometer to an ammeter reading 20.0 mA full scale, and compute the shunt resistance. (b). Show
> A galvanometer having a resistance of 25.0 Ω has a 1.00-Ω shunt resistance installed to convert it to an ammeter. It is then used to measure the current in a circuit consisting of a 15.0- Ω resistor connected across the terminals of a 25.0-V battery
> A closely wound, circular coil with radius 2.40 cm has 800 turns. (a). What must the current in the coil be if the magnetic field at the center of the coil is 0.0770 T? (b). At what distance x from the center of the coil, on the axis of the coil, is th
> A circuit consists of a series combination of 6.00-kΩ and 5.00-kΩ resistors connected across a 50.0-V battery having negligible internal resistance. You want to measure the true potential difference (that is, the potential difference without the meter
> The resistance of the coil of a pivotedcoil galvanometer is 9.36 , and a current of 0.0224 A causes it to deflect full scale. We want to convert this galvanometer to an ammeter reading 20.0 A full scale. The only shunt available has a resistance of 0.025
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.25 find Fig. E26.25: (a). the current in resistor R; (b). the resistance R; (c). the unknown emf E. (d). If the circuit is broken at point x, what is the current in resistor R? 28.0 V R + 4.00 A ww X 6.00 N 6.0
> The batteries shown in the circuit in Fig. E26.24 have negligibly small internal resistances. Find the current through Fig. E26.24: (a). the 30.0-Ω resistor; (b). the 20.0-Ω resistor; (c). the 10.0-V battery. 30.0 20.0 N
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.23, ammeter A1 reads 10.0 A and the batteries have no appreciable internal resistance. Fig. E26.23: (a). What is the resistance of R? (b). Find the readings in the other ammeters. (A2) 40.0 N R (A) (A4 (A3 20.0 N
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.34, the 6.0-Ω resistor is consuming energy at a rate of 24 J/s when the current through it flows as shown. Fig. E26.34: (a). Find the current through the ammeter A. (b). What are the polarity and emf E of
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.33 all meters are idealized and the batteries have no appreciable internal resistance. Fig. E26.33: (a). Find the reading of the voltmeter with the switch S open. Which point is at a higher potential: a or b? (b). Wi
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.32 both batteries have insignificant internal resistance and the idealized ammeter reads 1.50 A in the direction shown. Find the emf
> A battery with no internal resistance is connected across identical light bulbs as shown in Fig. Q26.7. When you close the switch S, will the brightness of bulbs B1 and B2 change? If so, how will it change? Explain. Fig. Q26.7: B B1 B2
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.31 the batteries have negligible internal resistance and the meters are both idealized. With the switch S open, the voltmeter reads 15.0 V. Fig. E26.31: (a). Find the emf 30.0 N A 20.0 + T 25.0 V 50.0 V 75.0 Ω E =
> Three very long parallel wires each carry current I in the directions shown in Fig. E28.28. If the separation between adjacent wires is d, calculate the magnitude and direction of the net magnetic force per unit length on each wire. Fig. E28.28: / /
> The 5.00-V battery in Fig. E26.28 is removed from the circuit and replaced by a 15.00-V battery, with its negative terminal next to point b. The rest of the circuit is as shown in the figure. Find Fig. E26.28: (a). the current in each branch and (b)
> The 10.00-V battery in Fig. E26.28 is removed from the circuit and reinserted with the opposite polarity, so that its positive terminal is now next to point a. The rest of the circuit is as shown in the figure. Find Fig. E26.28: (a). the current in e
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.28, find Fig. E26.28: (a). the current in each branch and (b). the potential difference Vab of point a relative to point b.
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.27, find Fig. E26.27: (a). the current in the 3.00-Ω resistor; (b). the unknown emfs 2.00 A R 4.00 N 3.00 N 6.00 N 3.00 A | 5.00 A ww
> Find the emfs E1 and E2 in the circuit of Fig. E26.26, and find the potential difference of point b relative to point a. Fig. E26.26: 1.00 N 20.0 V 6.00 N 1.00 A | 1.00 Ω ε 4.00 Ω a A|| 1.00 N E2 2.00 N
> For the circuit shown in Fig. E26.7 find the reading of the idealized ammeter if the battery has an internal resistance of 3.26 Ω. Fig. E26.7: 45.0 N 25.0 V 18.0 N ww 15.0 N A,
> For the circuit shown in Fig. E26.6 both meters are idealized, the battery has no appreciable internal resistance, and the ammeter reads 1.25 A. Fig. E26.6: (a). What does the voltmeter read? (b). What is the emf E of the battery? 25.0 N (A 15.0
> A triangular array of resistors is shown in Fig. E26.5. What current will this array draw from a 35.0-V battery having negligible internal resistance if we connect it across Fig. E26.5: (a). ab; (b). bc; (c). ac? (d). If the battery has an interna
> A machine part has a resistor X protruding from an opening in the side. This resistor is connected to three other resistors, as shown in Fig. E26.2. An ohmmeter connected across a and b reads 2.00 Ω. What is the resistance of X? Fig. E26.2:
> If two resistors R1 and R2 (R2 > R1) are connected in parallel as shown in Fig. Q26.6, which of the following must be true? In each case justify your answer. Fig. Q26.6: / / (a). I1 = I2. (b). I3 = I4. (c). The current is greater in R1 than in R2.
> When the polarity of the voltage applied to a dc motor is reversed, the direction of motion does not reverse. Why not? How could the direction of motion be reversed?
> A uniform wire of resistance R is cut into three equal lengths. One of these is formed into a circle and connected between the other two (Fig. E26.1). What is the resistance between the opposite ends a and b? Fig. E26.1: a b
> A 60-W, 120-V light bulb and a 200-W, 120-V light bulb are connected in series across a 240-V line. Assume that the resistance of each bulb does not vary with current. (Note: This description of a light bulb gives the power it dissipates when connected t
> Two light bulbs have constant resistances of 400 Ω and 800 Ω. If the two light bulbs are connected in series across a 120-V line, find (a). the current through each bulb; (b). the power dissipated in each bulb; (c). the total power dissipated in both
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.20, the rate at which R1 is dissipating electrical energy is 15.0 W. Fig. E26.20: (a). Find R1 and R2. (b). What is the emf of the battery? (c). Find the current through both R2 and the 10.0-Ω resistor.
> In the circuit in Fig. E26.19, a 20.0-Ω resistor is inside 100 g of pure water that is surrounded by insulating styrofoam. If the water is initially at 10.0°C, how long will it take for its temperature to rise to 58.0°C?
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.18,
> You are a technician testing the operation of a cyclotron. An alpha particle in the device moves in a circular path in a magnetic field
> You are a research scientist working on a high-energy particle accelerator. Using a modern version of the Thomson e/m apparatus, you want to measure the mass of a muon (a fundamental particle that has the same charge as an electron but greater mass). The
> A resistor with R = 850 Ω is connected to the plates of a charged capacitor with capacitance C = 4.62 µF. Just before the connection is made, the charge on the capacitor is 6.90 mC. (a). What is the energy initially stored in the capacitor? (b). What
> How many turns does this typical MRI magnet have? (a). 1100; (b). 3000; (c). 4000; (d). 22,000.
> A long, horizontal wire AB rests on the surface of a table and carries a current I. Horizontal wire CD is vertically above wire AB and is free to slide up and down on the two vertical metal guides C and D (Fig. E28.32). Wire CD is connected through the s
> A tank containing a liquid has turns of wire wrapped around it, causing it to act like an inductor. The liquid content of the tank can be measured by using its inductance to determine the height of the liquid in the tank. The inductance of the tank chang
> In the circuit shown in Fig. E26.17, the voltage across the 2.00-Ω resistor is 12.0 V. What are the emf of the battery and the current through the 6.00-Ω resistor? Fig. E26.17: /
> In the circuit shown in Fig. P30.61,
> Three identical resistors are connected in series. When a certain potential difference is applied across the combination, the total power dissipated is 45.0 W. What power would be dissipated if the three resistors were connected in parallel across the sa
> The wire semicircles shown in Fig. P28.66 have radii a and b. Calculate the net magnetic field (magnitude and direction) that the current in the wires produces at point P. Fig. P28.66: b P ->
> A wire 25.0 cm long lies along the z-axis and carries a current of 7.40 A in the +z-direction. The magnetic field is uniform and has components Bx = -0.242 T, By = -0.985 T, and Bz = -0.336 T. (a). Find the components of the magnetic force on the wire.
> A dielectric of permittivity 3.5 × 10-11 F/m completely fills the volume between two capacitor plates. For t > 0 the electric flux through the dielectric is (8.0 × 103 V ∙ m/s3) t3. The dielectric is ideal and nonmagnetic; the conduction current in the d
> The average bulk resistivity of the human body (apart from surface resistance of the skin) is about 5.0 Ω ∙ m. The conducting path between the hands can be represented approximately as a cylinder 1.6 m long and 0.10 m in diameter. The skin resistance can
> Figure P28.62 shows an end view of two long, parallel wires perpendicular to the xy-plane, each carrying a current I but in opposite directions. Figure P28.62: (a). Copy the diagram, and draw vectors to show the a P x- a (XI
> The wires in a household lamp cord are typically 3.0 mm apart center to center and carry equal currents in opposite directions. If the cord carries direct current to a 100-W light bulb connected across a 120-V potential difference, what force per meter d
> A particle of charge q > 0 is moving at speed v in the +z-direction through a region of uniform magnetic field
> A charged capacitor with C = 590 µF is connected in series to an inductor that has L = 0.330 H and negligible resistance. At an instant when the current in the inductor is i = 2.50 A, the current is increasing at a rate of di/dt = 73.0 A/s. During the cu
> Consider the circuit shown in Fig. E26.16. The current through the 6.00-Ω resistor is 4.00 A, in the direction shown. What are the currents through the 25.0-Ω and 20.0-Ω resistors? Fig. E26.16: 4.00 A 6.00 N ww 2
> The magnetic poles of a small cyclotron produce a magnetic field with magnitude 0.85 T. The poles have a radius of 0.40 m, which is the maximum radius of the orbits of the accelerated particles. (a). What is the maximum energy to which protons (q = 1.60
> An L-C circuit consists of a 60.0-mH inductor and a 250-µF capacitor. The initial charge on the capacitor is 6.00 µC, and the initial current in the inductor is zero. (a). What is the maximum voltage across the capacitor? (b). What is the maximum curre
> Your latest invention is a car alarm that produces sound at a particularly annoying frequency of 3500 Hz. To do this, the car-alarm circuitry must produce an alternating electric current of the same frequency. That’s why your design includes an inductor
> A very long, straight solenoid with a crosssectional area of 2.00 cm2 is wound with 90.0 turns of wire per centimeter. Starting at t = 0, the current in the solenoid is increasing according to i(t) = (0.160 A/s2) t2. A secondary winding of 5 turns encirc
> A small solid conductor with radius a is supported by insulating, nonmagnetic disks on the axis of a thin-walled tube with inner radius b. The inner and outer conductors carry equal currents i in opposite directions. (a). Use Ampere’s law to find the ma
> A coil has 400 turns and self-inductance 7.50 mH. The current in the coil varies with time according to i = (680 mA) cos (pt/0.0250 s). (a). What is the maximum emf induced in the coil? (b). What is the maximum average flux through each turn of the coi
> One solenoid is centered inside another. The outer one has a length of 50.0 cm and contains 6750 coils, while the coaxial inner solenoid is 3.0 cm long and 0.120 cm in diameter and contains 15 coils. The current in the outer solenoid is changing at 49.2
> Two long, parallel wires are separated by a distance of 2.50 cm. The force per unit length that each wire exerts on the other is 4.00 × 10-5 N/m, and the wires repel each other. The current in one wire is 0.600 A. (a). What is the current in the second
> An inductor is connected to the terminals of a battery that has an emf of 16.0 V and negligible internal resistance. The current is 4.86 mA at 0.940 ms after the connection is completed. After a long time, the current is 6.45 mA. What are (a). the resist
> An L-R-C series circuit has L = 0.450 H, C = 2.50 × 10-5 F, and resistance R. (a). What is the angular frequency of the circuit when R = 0? (b). What value must R have to give a 5.0% decrease in angular frequency compared to the value calculated in par
> An L-R-C series circuit has L = 0.600 H and C = 3.00 µF. (a). Calculate the angular frequency of oscillation for the circuit when R = 0. (b). What value of R gives critical damping? (c). What is the oscillation frequency
> In the circuit of Fig. E26.15, each resistor represents a light bulb. Let R1 = R2 = R3 = R4 = 4.50 Ω and
> An L-C circuit containing an 80.0-mH inductor and a 1.25-nF capacitor oscillates with a maximum current of 0.750 A. Calculate: (a). the maximum charge on the capacitor and (b). the oscillation frequency of the circuit. (c). Assuming the capacitor had
> In an L-C circuit, L = 85.0 mH and C = 3.20 µF. During the oscillations the maximum current in the inductor is 0.850 mA. (a). What is the maximum charge on the capacitor? (b). What is the magnitude of the charge on the capacitor at an instant when the c
> In Fig. 30.11 switch S1 is closed while switch S2 is kept open. The inductance is L = 0.380 H, the resistance is R = 48.0 Ω, and the emf of the battery is 18.0 V. At time t after S1 is closed, the current in the circuit is increasing
> A 35.0-V battery with negligible internal resistance, a 50.0Ω resistor, and a 1.25-mH inductor with negligible resistance are all connected in series with an open switch. The switch is suddenly closed. (a). How long after closing the switch will the cu
> In a proton accelerator used in elementary particle physics experiments, the trajectories of protons are controlled by bending magnets that produce a magnetic field of 4.80 T. What is the magnetic-field energy in a 10.0-cm3 volume of space where B = 4.80
> An air-filled toroidal solenoid has 300 turns of wire, a mean radius of 12.0 cm, and a cross-sectional area of 4.00 cm2. If the current is 5.00 A, calculate: (a). the magnetic field in the solenoid; (b). the self-inductance of the solenoid; (c). the en
> Two long, parallel wires are separated by a distance of 0.400 m (Fig. E28.29). The currents I1 and I2 have the directions shown. Fig. E28.29: (a). Calculate the magnitude of the force exerted by each wire on a 1.20-m length of the other. Is the force
> An air-filled toroidal solenoid has a mean radius of 15.0 cm and a cross-sectional area of 5.00 cm2. When the current is 12.0 A, the energy stored is 0.390 J. How many turns does the winding have?
> At the instant when the current in an inductor is increasing at a rate of 0.0640 A/s, the magnitude of the self-induced emf is 0.0160 V. (a). What is the inductance of the inductor? (b). If the inductor is a solenoid with 400 turns, what is the average
> (a). A long, straight solenoid has N turns, uniform cross-sectional area A, and length l. Show that the inductance of this solenoid is given by the equation L = µ0AN2/l. Assume that the magnetic field is uniform inside the solenoid and zero outside. (You
> A long, straight solenoid has 800 turns. When the current in the solenoid is 2.90 A, the average flux through each turn of the solenoid is 3.25 × 10-3 Wb. What must be the magnitude of the rate of change of the current in order for the self-induced emf t
> Compute the equivalent resistance of the network in Fig. E26.14, and find the current in each resistor. The battery has negligible internal resistance. Fig. E26.14: ε- 48.0 V r-0 1.00 Ω 3.00 Ω ww 7.00 Ω 5.00 Ω
> If two resistors R1 and R2 (R2 > R1) are connected in series as shown in Fig. Q26.5, which of the following must be true? In each case justify your answer. Fig. Q26.5: (a). I1 = I2 = I3. (b). The current is greater in R1 than in R2. (c). The ele
> When the current in a toroidal solenoid is changing at a rate of 0.0260 A/s, the magnitude of the induced emf is 12.6 mV. When the current equals 1.40 A, the average flux through each turn of the solenoid is 0.00285 Wb. How many turns does the solenoid h
> A toroidal solenoid with mean radius r and cross-sectional area A is wound uniformly with N1 turns. A second toroidal solenoid with N2 turns is wound uniformly on top of the first, so that the two solenoids have the same cross-sectional area and mean rad
> Two toroidal solenoids are wound around the same form so that the magnetic field of one passes through the turns of the other. Solenoid 1 has 700 turns, and solenoid 2 has 400 turns. When the current in solenoid 1 is 6.52 A, the average flux through each
> Two coils have mutual inductance M = 3.25 × 10-4 H. The current i1 in the first coil increases at a uniform rate of 830 A/s. (a). What is the magnitude of the induced emf in the second coil? Is it constant? (b). Suppose that the current described is in
> The body contains many small currents caused by the motion of ions in the organs and cells. Measurements of the magnetic field around the chest due to currents in the heart give values of about 10 µG. Although the actual currents are rather complicated,
> Suppose that the parallel plates in Fig. 29.23 have an area of 3.00 cm2 and are separated by a 2.50-mm-thick sheet of dielectric that completely fills the volume between the plates. The dielectric has dielectric constant 4.70. (You can ignore fringing ef
> A long, thin solenoid has 400 turns per meter and radius 1.10 cm. The current in the solenoid is increasing at a uniform rate di/dt. The induced electric field at a point near the center of the solenoid and 3.50 cm from its axis is 8.00 × 10-6 V/m. Calcu
> Airplanes and trains move through the earth’s magnetic field at rather high speeds, so it is reasonable to wonder whether this field can have a substantial effect on them. We shall use a typical value of 0.50 G for the earth’s field. (a). The French TGV
> How fast (in m/s and mph) would a 5.00-cm copper bar have to move at right angles to a 0.650-T magnetic field to generate 1.50 V (the same as a AA battery) across its ends? Does this seem like a practical way to generate electricity?
> The current in the long, straight wire AB shown in Fig. E29.7 is upward and is increasing steadily at a rate di/dt. Figure E29.7: (a). At an instant when the current is i, what are the magnitude and direction of the field B at a distance r to the righ
> A coil 4.00 cm in radius, containing 500 turns, is placed in a uniform magnetic field that varies with time according to B = (0.0120 T/s) t + (3.00 × 10-5 T/s4) t4. The coil is connected to a 600-Ω resistor, and its plane is perpendicular to the magnetic
> In Fig. E26.11 the battery has emf 35.0 V and negligible internal resistance. R1 = 5.00 Ω. The current through R1 is 1.50 A, and the current through R3 = 4.50 A. What are the resistances R2 and R3? Fig. E26.11: ww R1 R2 R3
> A circular loop of wire with a radius of 12.0 cm and oriented in the horizontal xy-plane is located in a region of uniform magnetic field. A field of 1.5 T is directed along the positive z-direction, which is upward. (a). If the loop is removed from the
> In a physics laboratory experiment, a coil with 200 turns enclosing an area of 12 cm2 is rotated in 0.040 s from a position where its plane is perpendicular to the earth’s magnetic field to a position where its plane is parallel to the field. The earth’s
> The armature of a small generator consists of a flat, square coil with 120 turns and sides with a length of 1.60 cm. The coil rotates in a magnetic field of 0.0750 T. What is the angular speed of the coil if the maximum emf produced is 24.0 mV?
> A very long, straight horizontal wire carries a current such that 8.20 × 1018 electrons per second pass any given point going from west to east. What are the magnitude and direction of the magnetic field this wire produces at a point 4.00 cm directly abo
> In many magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) systems, the magnetic field is produced by a superconducting magnet that must be kept cooled below the superconducting transition temperature. If the cryogenic cooling system fails, the magnet coils may lose their
> A single loop of wire with an area of 0.0900 m2 is in a uniform magnetic field that has an initial value of 3.80 T, is perpendicular to the plane of the loop, and is decreasing at a constant rate of 0.190 T/s. (a). What emf is induced in this loop? (b)
> The current in the windings of a toroidal solenoid is 2.400 A. There are 500 turns, and the mean radius is 25.00 cm. The toroidal solenoid is filled with a magnetic material. The magnetic field inside the windings is found to be 1.940 T. Calculate (a). t
> A toroidal solenoid with 400 turns of wire and a mean radius of 6.0 cm carries a current of 0.25 A. The relative permeability of the core is 80. (a). What is the magnetic field in the core? (b). What part of the magnetic field is due to atomic currents?