Upper-division students' difficulties with Ampère's law Documents

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Upper-division students' difficulties with Ampère's law 

written by Colin S. Wallace and Stephanie Viola Chasteen

This study presents and interprets some conceptual difficulties junior-level physics students experience with Ampère's law. We present both quantitative data, based on students' written responses to conceptual questions, and qualitative data, based on interviews of students solving Ampère's law problems. We find that some students struggle to connect the current enclosed by an Ampèrian loop to the properties of the magnetic field while some students do not use information about the magnetic field to help them solve Ampère's law problems. In this paper, we show how these observations may be interpreted as evidence that some students do not see the integral in Ampère's law as representing a sum and that some students do not use accessible information about the magnetic field as they attempt to solve Ampère's law problems. This work extends previous studies into students' difficulties with Ampère's law and provides possible guidance for instruction.

Released under a This article was published in Phys. Rev. ST Physics Ed. Research 6, 020115, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.6.020115 and is released under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Published September 27, 2010
Last Modified March 12, 2011

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