Ampère's force law
In magnetostatics, Ampère's force law describes the force of attraction or repulsion between two current-carrying wires. The physical origin of this force is that each wire generates a magnetic field, following the Biot–Savart law, and the other wire experiences a magnetic force as a consequence, following the Lorentz force law.
Equation
Special case: Two straight parallel wires
The best-known and simplest example of Ampère's force law, which underlaid the definition of the ampere, the SI unit of electric current, states that the magnetic force per unit length between two straight parallel conductors iswhere is the magnetic force constant from the Biot–Savart law, is the total force on either wire per unit length of the shorter, is the distance between the two wires, and, are the direct currents carried by the wires.
This is a good approximation if one wire is sufficiently longer than the other, so that it can be approximated as infinitely long, and if the distance between the wires is small compared to their lengths, but large compared to their diameters. The value of depends upon the system of units chosen, and the value of decides how large the unit of current will be.
In the SI system,
which is in SI units. Here is the magnetic constant which in SI units is
General case
The general formulation of the magnetic force for arbitrary geometries is based on iterated line integrals and combines the Biot–Savart law and Lorentz force in one equation as shown below.where
- is the total magnetic force felt by wire 1 due to wire 2,
- and are the currents running through wires 1 and 2, respectively,
- The double line integration sums the force upon each element of wire 1 due to the magnetic field of each element of wire 2,
- and are infinitesimal vectors associated with wire 1 and wire 2 respectively ; see line integral for a detailed definition,
- The vector is the unit vector pointing from the differential element on wire 2 towards the differential element on wire 1, and |r| is the distance separating these elements,
- The multiplication × is a vector cross product,
- The sign of is relative to the orientation .
For the case of two separate closed wires, the law can be rewritten in the following equivalent way by expanding the vector triple product and applying Stokes' theorem:
In this form, it is immediately obvious that the force on wire 1 due to wire 2 is equal and opposite the force on wire 2 due to wire 1, in accordance with Newton's third law of motion.
Historical background
The form of Ampere's force law commonly given was derived by James Clerk Maxwell in 1873 and is one of several expressions consistent with the original experiments of André-Marie Ampère and Carl Friedrich Gauss.The x-component of the force between two linear currents I and I, as depicted in the adjacent diagram, was given by Ampère in 1825 and Gauss in 1833 as follows:
Following Ampère, a number of scientists, including Wilhelm Weber, Rudolf Clausius, Maxwell, Bernhard Riemann, Hermann Grassmann, and Walther Ritz, developed this expression to find a fundamental expression of the force. Through differentiation, it can be shown that:
and also the identity:
With these expressions, Ampère's force law can be expressed as:
Using the identities:
and
Ampère's results can be expressed in the form:
As Maxwell noted, terms can be added to this expression, which are derivatives of a function Q and, when integrated, cancel each other out. Thus, Maxwell gave "the most general form consistent with the experimental facts" for the force on ds arising from the action of ds
Q is a function of r, according to Maxwell, which "cannot be determined, without assumptions of some kind, from experiments in which the active current forms a closed circuit." Taking the function Q to be of the form:
We obtain the general expression for the force exerted on ds by ds' :
Integrating around s
If we take k=+1, we obtain
Using the vector identity for the triple cross product, we may express this result as
When integrated around ds
Derivation of parallel straight wire case from general formula
Start from the general formula:Assume wire 2 is along the x-axis, and wire 1 is at y=D, z=0, parallel to the x-axis. Let be the x-coordinate of the differential element of wire 1 and wire 2, respectively. In other words, the differential element of wire 1 is at and the differential element of wire 2 is at. By properties of line integrals, and. Also,
and
Therefore, the integral is
Evaluating the cross-product:
Next, we integrate from to :
If wire 1 is also infinite, the integral diverges, because the total attractive force between two infinite parallel wires is infinity. In fact, what we really want to know is the attractive force per unit length of wire 1. Therefore, assume wire 1 has a large but finite length. Then the force vector felt by wire 1 is:
As expected, the force that the wire feels is proportional to its length. The force per unit length is:
The direction of the force is along the y-axis, representing wire 1 getting pulled towards wire 2 if the currents are parallel, as expected. The magnitude of the force per unit length agrees with the expression for shown above.
Notable derivations
Chronologically ordered:- Ampère's original 1823 derivation:
- *
- Maxwell's 1873 derivation:
- *
- Pierre Duhem's 1892 derivation:
- *
- **translation of:
- Alfred O'Rahilly's 1938 derivation:
- *–104