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Download Chapter 17-3 Electric Currents
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• Michael Faraday • A current can be produced by pushing a magnet through a coil of wire • Causes a charges in wire to move • An electric current can be produced in a circuit by a changing magnetic field • As wire moves in and out of field – current will continue • Rotating the current or changing the strength of magnetic field - Induces current • Pushing a loop through a magnetic field requires work • Greater the magnetic field – stronger the force required to push loop through field • Electrical energy is produced by electromagnetic induction • Force at max value when charged particles move perpendicular to magnetic field. • Zero current when the wire moves parallel to magnetic field • Convert mechanical energy to electrical energy • Loop of wire inside turns within a magnetic field – current produced • For each ½ rotation of loop • Current produced by generator reverses direction • Alternating Current (AC) • Oscillating electric and magnetic field • Perpendicular to each other • Perpendicular to wave direction Step-Up Transformer • Increases voltage - output voltage is greater than the input voltage • # of wire turns on the secondary coil > # of turns on the primary coil Step-Down Transformer • Decreases the voltage - output voltage is less than the input voltage • # of wire turns on the secondary coil < # of turns on the primary coil