Chapter 8: Magnetism, EMI, Maxwell’s Equations & EM Waves (Set-2)

A current element produces a magnetic field whose magnitude is given by

A Ampere’s law
B Biot–Savart law
C Faraday’s law
D Maxwell–Ampere law

Magnetic field inside a long solenoid is

A Zero
B Non-uniform
C Nearly uniform
D Inversely proportional to current

Magnetic field in a toroid depends on

A Radial distance from center
B Height of toroid
C Flux only
D None

Magnetic dipole moment of a current loop is proportional to

A Current
B Loop area
C Both A and B
D Only number of turns

Force on a moving charge in a magnetic field is zero if

A Charge is zero
B Velocity ∥ B
C B = 0
D All of these

Cyclotron frequency depends on

A Mass & charge of particle
B Magnetic field
C Radius of orbit
D Both A and B

The Hall effect is used to measure

A Resistivity
B Carrier density
C Permeability
D Flux

Hall voltage increases when

A Magnetic field decreases
B Charge density increases
C Current increases
D Sample thickness increases

A positive Hall coefficient implies

A Electrons
B Holes
C No carriers
D Both electrons and holes equally

Hall coefficient dimensions are

A m³/C
B m²/C
C m/C
D None

Diamagnetic materials are repelled because

A Permanent dipoles form
B Induced dipoles oppose magnetic field
C Electrons align parallel
D Strong exchange interactions exist

Paramagnetic susceptibility is

A Negative
B Weak positive
C Strong positive
D Zero

Ferromagnetic domains are

A Random atomic groups
B Regions with aligned dipoles
C Temporary structures
D Only found in liquids

Coercivity of a ferromagnet indicates

A Magnetic induction
B Heat capacity
C Resistance to demagnetization
D Energy stored

A material with small hysteresis loss is suitable for

A Permanent magnets
B Transformer cores
C Hard disks
D Magnetic memory

Faraday’s law in integral form is

A ∮E⋅dℓ=0
B ∮E⋅dℓ=−dΦB/dt
C ∮B⋅dℓ=μ0I
D ∇⋅E=ρ/ϵ0

Induced EMF in a straight conductor moving perpendicularly in a magnetic field is

A BL
B BIL
C BvL
D v/L

EMF induced in a coil is zero when

A Flux is constant
B Flux changes
C Coil rotates
D Magnetic field is strong

Lenz’s law determines

A Magnitude of EMF
B Direction of induced EMF
C Phase of voltage
D Inductance

Mutual inductance M is

A Always positive
B Always negative
C Zero for any two coils
D Dependent on angle between coils

The energy stored in an inductor is

A 1/2 CV²
B 1/2 LI²
C 1/2 RI²
D L²I

The time constant of an RL circuit is

A R/L
B L/R
C LR
D 1/LR

Eddy currents are produced due to

A Changing electric field
B Changing magnetic flux
C Constant magnetic field
D Charge flow in vacuum

Eddy current losses can be reduced by

A Laminating cores
B Increasing thickness
C Increasing flux
D Using pure iron

In AC circuits, inductive reactance increases with

A Decreasing frequency
B Increasing frequency
C Inductance decreasing
D None

RMS value of AC current is

A Peak value
B Zero
C I0/2
D 2I0

Power factor in AC circuits is

A sin φ
B cos φ
C tan φ
D φ itself

A capacitor in AC causes

A Current to lag voltage
B Voltage to lag current
C No phase difference
D Both to vanish

Resonance in LCR circuit occurs when

A XL = XC
B XL = R
C XC = R
D R = 0

At resonance, the impedance is

A Maximum
B Minimum
C Zero
D Infinite

Maxwell’s displacement current accounts for

A Magnetic monopoles
B Continuity of current
C Electric field in conductors
D Light propagation only

The modified Ampere–Maxwell law is

A ∇⋅B = 0
B ∇×B = μ0J + μ0ϵ0∂E/∂t
C ∇×E = −∂B/∂t
D F = q(E + v×B)

A consequence of Maxwell’s equations is

A Existence of instantaneous action-at-distance
B Existence of EM waves
C Inability of waves to propagate in vacuum
D B-field only

EM waves are generated by

A Constant electric field
B Constant magnetic field
C Accelerating charges
D Stationary charges

In EM waves, ratio of E/B is

A c
B
C 1/c
D 0

Wave impedance in a medium is

A √(μ/ϵ)
B √(ϵ/μ)
C με
D 1/√(μϵ)

Poynting vector magnitude is

A EH
B EB
C E/H
D H/E

Electromagnetic energy density is

A 1/2(ϵE² + μH²)
B EHEH
C E²H
D ϵμEH

In conductors, attenuation of EM waves is proportional to

A Conductivity
B Resistivity
C Vacuum permittivity
D None

Skin depth decreases when

A Conductivity decreases
B Frequency decreases
C Permeability increases
D Resistivity increases

For good conductors, wave propagation is

A Efficient
B Poor due to absorption
C Constant velocity
D Impossible

Phase velocity in conductors is

A Greater than c
B Less than c
C Zero
D Unrelated to frequency

Dispersion occurs when

A Wave speed depends on frequency
B Wave speed constant
C Medium is vacuum
D No magnetic field

Normal dispersion implies

A dn/dω < 0
B dn/dω > 0
C n = constant
D n = 0

Conductivity σ affects

A Reflection coefficient
B Skin depth
C Attenuation
D All of these

In a dielectric, EM wave velocity is

A 1/√(μϵ)
B c
C Infinite
D Zero

Magnetic permeability of vacuum is

A 8.85×10⁻¹²
B 4π×10⁻⁷
C 377
D 1

Gauss’s law for magnetism implies

A Magnetic flux is zero
B Magnetic monopoles exist
C Divergence of B is zero
D B is always constant

In time-varying fields, curl E equals

A Zero
B Constant
C −∂B/∂t
D ∂E/∂t

EM wave equation for electric field is

A ∇⋅E = 0
B ∇²E = 0
C ∇²E = μϵ ∂²E/∂t²
D ∇×E = 0