Firstly without the marking criteria it is impossible to say what the mark should be. It may be marked as a band 6 answer, which can explain a zero or if less I would have expected part marks.**************
With reference to the physical principles involved, explain the operation of the galvanometer (3marks)
With that statement you would never obtain 3 in the HSC because you have used a wrong physics principle.Faraday's Law states that when there is a change in flux, a voltage will be induced. (This bit is wrong i should say motor effect. My brain went wrong during exam but other things i wrote is fine) The galvanometer uses this effect to measure current.
This would have been ignored and is partially correct and partially misleading. It was being looked for in the second part of the question.A coil is placed in a radial magnetic field produced by a pair of curved magnets. So the magnetic field is always perpendicular to the coi, ie. the torque will always be maximum.
I would normally have expected a 1 there but you haven't explained why the force causes rotation or where on the coil this force is being applied or torque.As the current is flow through the coil, it will experience a corce and the pointer attached will therefore turn and against the calibrated scale.
Opposing to what?The spring will produce an opposing torque to stop the pointer. The soft iron core is used to increase sensitivity.
Firstly you haven't explained which part of the coil is perpendicular. Some is perpendicular (the two sides) even if it wasn't a radial field. The ends are always parallel because it radial.The next question :
The magnet is shaped so as to produce a uniform radial magnetic field. What is the advantage of having such a field? (1mark)
The field will always perpendicular to the coil, and therefore the torque will always be at maximum.
I got 0 mark here again.
Typical and exactly what the board of studies does. No text book is endorsed by the board of studies and as such, if there is an error in the text book, it isn't a reason to change the marking criteria.Ye i have showed the success book answer to her.
wtf then she said : Im not responsible for that book. The answer there is wrong. I havnt explained the "area of the coil" thing to her yet coz she was away 1week before holiday :mad1:
No they are trying to get you to be precise in your answers, so that in the HSC you are as well, so you don't drop marks if a question is being marked to a high band level.Then i talked to my own physics teacher,
I did emphasise the word "AREA of the coil" and showed to formulas to him, then i said if i write "the coil is parallel to the field, so the torque is maximum" in the hsc i will get wrong.
Then he said, "well then make sure u say "area of the coil" to make it clear"
The teachers are just not willing to help you to gain any extra marks :mad1:
Actually it is... If a HSC textbook shows incorrect information (eg. Dotpoint Physics, especially about the MM experiement), they have to... I don't know why but my teacher said that this is the case.if there is an error in the text book, it isn't a reason to change the marking criteria.
Strange that I'm wrong when I have been in discussions about this and it hasn't occurred and what I said is a quote from the head of the exam committee.Actually it is... If a HSC textbook shows incorrect information (eg. Dotpoint Physics, especially about the MM experiement), they have to... I don't know why but my teacher said that this is the case.
Sure doSo you do still stick by your initial argument that was supported by a plasma engineer?
This is coming from somebody who didn't even know about the application of the motor effect to the moving coil galvanometer (and of course someone who wasn't smart enough to pick up on some really obvious sarcasm), something that the syllabus requires.Sure do
Do you still stick to your initial argument that coeyz answers were correct?
"ROFL"ing at this guy who had the audacity to claim he knew something about Physics (sorry ), and yet proceeded to spout that:Hey, here's the response from somebody who definitely knows what they're talking about - sorry
Mate you have no clue about how galvanometers work! If your "plasma physicist" gave you this explanation, please tell him to stop inhaling the plasma and do something useful with it instead.The galvanometer works by magnetic attraction – the coil forms an electromagnet, and the curved magnet is the other magnet. The north pole of the curved magnet attracts the south pole of the electromagnet and vice versa.
Hey I checked out that link and nowhere does it say anything about a galvanometer working by magnetic attraction, in fact it says that it works by the "interaction of the coil’s magnetic field with the magnetic field of the permanent magnet" (i.e. the motor effect)I strongly suggest you reread what I posted - perhaps look here for further explanation - Galvanometer - MSN Encarta
I have to disagree. The torque is maximum when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
you would lose another mark because you claimed that the torque is maximum when the magnetic field is perpendicular to the coil, in fact it is maximum when the magnetic field is parrallel to the coil.
Are you serious boy!? Go check out your textbook; in Jacaranda Physics it clearly says that "the plane of the coil will always be parallel to the magnetic field and the torque will be constant no matter how far the coil is deflected"I have to disagree. The torque is maximum when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
See attachment.
Lol what did you think I said originally?That isn't what you said originally.
Lol what did you think I said originally?
You have the same problem as the first. What part of the coil is parallel to the coil?in fact it is maximum when the magnetic field is parrallel to the coil.
And?Are you serious boy!? Go check out your textbook; in Jacaranda Physics it clearly says that "the plane of the coil will always be parallel to the magnetic field and the torque will be constant no matter how far the coil is deflected"
I hate it when people just blindly apply formulas without knowing what it means... I do 4U mathematics, you honestly think I don't know how to do simple substitutions and the max/min values of trig functions?Ok lets look at the formula for torque: torque = nBIAcosx right?
....
Yes but the angle between the magnetic field and the current carrying sides causing the force is not changing as the coil rotates. It doesn't matter if its a radial field or not.And?
The definition of Torque is the turning effect/moment of a force, and is given by T=Fd, in the case of a current carrying coil, F=BILsinθ... Note that sin90deg=1 and sin0=0. Also note that when Force is zero, Torque is also zero by this defintion. So torque is a maximum when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field. Obviously if you're describing this in terms of the AREA of the coil, then that's different.
ok.... what do you want a medal?I do 4U mathematics
Just because you do 4U maths doesn't mean you're good at it.you honestly think I don't know how to do simple substitutions and the max/min values of trig functions?
Actually if you really did know what torque is then you would know that the F in T=Fd stands for the force that is perpendicular to the coil plane (ie F is perpendicular to d).The definition of Torque is the turning effect/moment of a force, and is given by T=Fd, in the case of a current carrying coil, F=BILsinθ... Note that sin90deg=1 and sin0=0. Also note that when Force is zero, Torque is also zero by this defintion. So torque is a maximum when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
Yeah I know! The way you just blindly used T=Fd was pretty frustrating, eh? LOLI hate it when people just blindly apply formulas without knowing what it means...
Already got one at prize giving last year.ok.... what do you want a medal?
You were patronising me. I know what the max/min values for trig functions are.Just because you do 4U maths doesn't mean you're good at it.
Which is what I said earlier. Look back a few pages.Actually if you really did know what torque is then you would know that the F in T=Fd stands for the force that is perpendicular to the coil plane (ie F is perpendicular to d).
No prize for seconds mate.Yeah I know! The way you just blindly used T=Fd was pretty frustrating, eh? LOL
Yeah but no-one caresAlready got one at prize giving last year.
Which is what I said earlier. Look back a few pages
LOL and you were WRONG back there as well, good work!if you have a radial magnetic field, then the coil will always experience maximum force, which only happens when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
But jm01 was talking about MAX FORCE, not MAX TORQUE..LOL and you were WRONG back there as well, good work!
Because force is perpendicular to the coil plane and because Torque is maximum when force is perpendicular to the magnetic field, therefore Torque is maximum when the coil plane is parallel to the magnetic field.
Firstly, when there there is maximum force there is maximum torque (assuming d stays constant)But jm01 was talking about MAX FORCE, not MAX TORQUE..
Firstly, when there there is maximum force there is maximum torque (assuming d stays constant)
Secondly, he said that "maximum force, which only happens when the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field."
Which is still wrong because there is maximum force when the the force is perpendicular to the magnetic field.
When the force is maximum (i.e. when the the force is perpendicular to the magnetic field), the coil plane must be parallel to the magnetic field.