Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- From: John Larkin <jjlarkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 26 May 2007 10:15:11 -0700
On 26 May 2007 06:19:38 -0700, jmc8197@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Suppose a loop of conductor is intitially carrying no current and is
placed in a changing magnetic field for time T, and the induced
current is allowed to go back to zero. If this is repeated with the
magnetic field changing in the same way, will the induced I circulate
clockwise 50% of the time, anti-clockwise 50%?
It depends on whether the loop has resistance or if it's a
superconductor. If it has resistance and the loop's L/R time constant
is fast compared to the rate of change of the external field, the loop
current will be proportional to the rate of change of the field.
If there's no resistance in the loop, the current will be proportional
to the instantaneous value of the appplied field, and follow its sign.
In between, it's in between.
John
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- From: Paul Hovnanian P.E.
- Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- References:
- Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- From: jmc8197
- Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- Prev by Date: Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- Next by Date: Re: Adapter Pin out for Logical Devices programmer
- Previous by thread: Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- Next by thread: Re: Direction of Induced I in a loop of conductor?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|