Biot-Savart and Ampère's Law
The Biot-Savart and Ampère laws are the two equivalent ways to compute the steady magnetic field of a current distribution.
Definition
The Biot-Savart law expresses the magnetic field as a superposition of contributions from current elements; Ampère's law states that the circulation of the magnetic field around a closed loop equals the permeability times the enclosed steady current, and the two are equivalent for time-independent currents.
Scope
This topic covers the Biot-Savart law for the field of current elements, Ampère's circuital law in integral and differential form, and their use to find the fields of wires, loops, solenoids, and toroids. It includes the consistency of the two laws for steady currents and the role of symmetry in choosing the simpler approach.
Core questions
- How is the field of an arbitrary steady current found by integration?
- When does Ampère's law give the field directly from symmetry?
- Why must Ampère's law be amended once currents vary in time?
Key concepts
- current element
- magnetic field of a wire
- solenoid
- toroid
- Amperian loop
- curl of the magnetic field
- permeability of free space
Key theories
- Biot-Savart law
- A current element produces a magnetic field perpendicular to the current and the displacement to the field point, decreasing as the inverse square of distance; the total field is the integral over the circuit.
- Ampère's circuital law
- For steady currents, the closed-loop integral of the magnetic field equals the enclosed current times the permeability, giving the field directly when the geometry is symmetric enough.
Clinical relevance
These laws are used to design solenoids and gradient coils for magnetic resonance imaging, electromagnets, current-carrying coils in motors, and magnetic field calculations in electrical engineering.
History
Following Ørsted's 1820 demonstration, Biot and Savart deduced the inverse-square field law from pendulum measurements of a magnetized needle near a current. Ampère, in the same period, derived the circuital relation and the force between currents, work later generalized by Maxwell.
Key figures
- Jean-Baptiste Biot
- Félix Savart
- André-Marie Ampère
Related topics
Seminal works
- jackson1998
- griffiths2017
Frequently asked questions
- When should I use Ampère's law instead of Biot-Savart?
- Ampère's law gives the field with little work when the problem has enough symmetry — such as an infinite wire, solenoid, or toroid — so that the field is uniform along a chosen loop; otherwise the Biot-Savart integral is needed.
- Does Ampère's law in its original form always hold?
- Only for steady currents; with time-varying fields it must be supplemented by Maxwell's displacement-current term to remain consistent with charge conservation.