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Acting Out Current Density: Instructor's Guide

Main Ideas

Students discuss the concept of current density and how it is measured.

Students' Task

Estimated Time: 10 minutes

To move around the room to mimic specified current densities.

Prerequisite Knowledge

Students will probably associate the words “charge per time” with the concept of current, but may have no further conceptual understanding. They will probably also be familiar with mass and charge densities as “amount of stuff per length/area/volume.”

We usually do this activity sometime after the Acting Out Charge Densities activity.

Props/Equipment

Activity: Introduction

Prompts: Imagine you are a bunch of charges.

Activity: Student Conversations

Activity: Wrap-up

Formalism: You might want to follow this conceptual activity with a brief lecture/discussion on the formalism and conventions. Write the symbols for linear, surface and volume density on the board ($\Vec{I}$, $\Vec{K}$ and $\Vec{J}$), solicit from the class their appropriate units and dimensions and write the formulas for how the total current is computed from a current density and/or a charge density and velocity. Emphasize that current density is a flux.

We follow the discussion in Griffiths' Introduction to Electrodynamics, 3rd Ed., pp. 208-214). See also

Extensions

This activity works particularly well if the students have already done the activity

This activity is included within a sequence of activities addressing Ampere’s law. The following activities are additional activities which are included within this sequence.