Measurement of the Earth’s Magnetic Field
Measurement of the Earth’s Magnetic Field
Solution:
- Apparatus:
- Magnetic compass
- Helmholtz coils or solenoid
- Power supply for Helmholtz coils
- Protractor or angular measurement device
- Procedure:
- Calibrate the Helmholtz coils to produce a known magnetic field.
- Place the compass at the center of the Helmholtz coils.
- Adjust the current in the coils until the compass needle is deflected by 45 degrees.
- Measure the current and calculate the magnetic field produced by the coils.
- Use the known field from the coils and the deflection angle to calculate the Earth’s magnetic field.
- Calculations:
- Use the formula Bearth=Bcoiltan(θ)B_{earth} = B_{coil} \tan(\theta), where BcoilB_{coil} is the magnetic field produced by the coils, and θ\theta is the deflection angle.
- Error Minimization:
- Ensure accurate calibration of the Helmholtz coils.
- Use a precise protractor for angular measurements.
- Perform the experiment away from magnetic disturbances and repeat multiple times for consistency.