WHAT IS ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION – DEFINITION BASICS AND TUTORIALS



Electric current creates a magnetic field, the reverse effect also exists: magnetic fields, in turn, can influence electric charges and cause electric currents to flow. However, there is an important twist: the magnetic field must be changing in order to have any effect.

A static magnetic field, such as a bar magnet, will not cause any motion of nearby charge. Yet if there is any relative motion between the charge and the magnetic field—for example, because either the magnet or the wire is being moved, or because the strength of the magnet itself is changing— then a force will be exerted on the charge, causing it to move.

This force is called an electromotive force (emf) which, just like an ordinary electric field, is distinguished by its property of accelerating electric charges. The most elementary case of the electromotive force involves a single charged particle traveling through a magnetic field, at a right angle to the field lines (the direction along which iron filings would line up).

This charge experiences a force again at right angles to both the field and its velocity, the direction of which (up or down) depends on the sign of the charge (positive or negative) and can be specified in terms of another right-hand rule, as illustrated in Figure 1.3.


This effect can be expressed concisely in mathematical terms of a cross product of vector quantities (i.e., quantities with a directionality in space, represented in boldface), in what is known as the Lorentz equation, F = ¼ qv X B where F denotes the force, q the particle’s charge, v its velocity, and B the magnetic field.

In the case where the angle between v and B is 908 (i.e., the charge travels at right angles to the direction of the field) the magnitude or numerical result for F is simply the arithmetic product of the three quantities. This is the maximum force possible: as the term cross product suggests, the charge has to move across the field in order to experience the effect.

The more v and B are at right angles to each other, the greater the force; the more closely aligned v and B are, the smaller the force. If v and B are parallel—that is, the charge is traveling along the magnetic field lines rather than across them—the force on the charge is zero. Figure 1.3 illustrates a typical application of this relationship.

The charges q reside inside a wire, being moved as a whole so that each of the microscopic charges inside has a velocity v in the direction of the wire’s motion. If we align our right hand with that direction v and then curl our fingers in the direction of the magnetic field B (shown in the illustration as pointing straight back into the page), our thumb will point in the direction of the force F on a positive test charge.

Because in practice the positive charges in a metal cannot move but the negatively charged electrons can, we observe a flow of electrons in the negative or opposite direction of F. 

Because only the relative motion between the charge and the magnetic field matters, the same effect results if the charge is stationary in space and the magnetic field is moved (e.g., by physically moving a bar magnet), or even if both the magnet and the wire are stationary but the magnetic field is somehow made to become stronger or weaker over time.

The phenomenon of electromagnetic induction occurs when this electromagnetic force acts on the electrons inside a wire, accelerating them in one direction along the wire and thus causing a current to flow. The current resulting from such a changing magnetic field is referred to as an induced current.

This is the fundamental process by which electricity is generated, which will be applied over and over within the many elaborate geometric arrangements of wires and magnetic fields inside actual generators.

No comments:

Post a Comment

PREVIOUS ARTICLES

free counters