Square Helmholtz Coils

​
coil geometry
L (m)
2
spacing (m)
1.1
number of turns in each coil
turns
10
current in each coil
I (A)
5
B
z
(0,0,0) = 0.404774 gauss
​
This Demonstration computes the magnetic field produced by a pair of square Helmholtz coils. The results are much more straightforward than those for the more conventional circular Helmholtz coils, which involve elliptic integrals. You can adjust the field at the center of the coils so that over a small region of space it cancels the Earth's magnetic field (which ranges from about 0.3 gauss to 0.6 gauss).

Details

Helmholtz coils can be used to cancel the Earth's magnetic field over a region of space by generating a uniform magnetic field of equal magnitude but in the opposite direction. For two square coils, the easiest way to calculate the magnetic field
B
at a point is first to calculate the vector potential
A
due to both coils and then to take the curl of
A
in Cartesian coordinates around that point. The region over which the field is uniform is determined from the plots of
B
z
versus
y
and
B
z
versus
z
. The magnetic field lines in the
y
-
z
plane are given by the contours of the scalar function
A
x
(0,y,z)
, since
B·∇
A
x
(0,y,z)=0
.

External Links

Vector Potential (Wolfram MathWorld)
Curl (Wolfram MathWorld)

Permanent Citation

Peter Euripides
​
​"Square Helmholtz Coils"​
​http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/SquareHelmholtzCoils/​
​Wolfram Demonstrations Project​
​Published: December 27, 2007