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Figure 23-1 Magnetic Induction
Figure 23-1 Magnetic Induction

Vol. 19, No 4, Nov 2016
Vol. 19, No 4, Nov 2016

... conducting loop will appear in such a direction that it opposes the change that produced it. In 1845 Michael Faraday discovered that light propagation in a material can be influenced by external magnetic fields. In 1854 Gustav Robert Kirchhoff published Kirchhoff’s Laws on the conservation of electr ...


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... coil with 25 turns of wire is moving in a uniform magnetic field of 1.5 T. The magnetic field is perpendicular to the plane of the coil. The cross-sectional area of the coil is 0.80 m2. The coil exits the field in 1.0 s.  Find the induced emf.  Determine the induced current in the coil if the coil ...
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... conductor is exposed to a uniform magnetic field, it experiences a force. We have also seen that when a current loop is exposed to a magnetic field, it experiences a torque. This torque can be expressed in the general form: ...
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What creates an electric current

... more pathways for the electrical current to run through. ...
< 1 ... 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 ... 115 >

Electromagnetic field

An electromagnetic field (also EMF or EM field) is a physical field produced by electrically charged objects. It affects the behavior of charged objects in the vicinity of the field. The electromagnetic field extends indefinitely throughout space and describes the electromagnetic interaction. It is one of the four fundamental forces of nature (the others are gravitation, weak interaction and strong interaction).The field can be viewed as the combination of an electric field and a magnetic field. The electric field is produced by stationary charges, and the magnetic field by moving charges (currents); these two are often described as the sources of the field. The way in which charges and currents interact with the electromagnetic field is described by Maxwell's equations and the Lorentz force law.From a classical perspective in the history of electromagnetism, the electromagnetic field can be regarded as a smooth, continuous field, propagated in a wavelike manner; whereas from the perspective of quantum field theory, the field is seen as quantized, being composed of individual particles.
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