Externet Posted November 23 Posted November 23 Hello. A coil with a laminated iron core, put to spin... Would it generate some electric current in its windings just because the faint earth magnetism is in the way ? -No permanent magnets involved-
swansont Posted November 23 Posted November 23 Yes. We had a physics lab when I was a TA that detected the earth’s field this way; the students measured the voltage in different orientations. (An interesting anecdote is that students in one corner of the room got a different answer because there was an NMR lab in the building, and the field in that corner was measurably different.) edit: there are a few schools that list a similar lab online, such as https://www2.oberlin.edu/physics/catalog/demonstrations/em/earthinductor.html
John Cuthber Posted November 24 Posted November 24 The device rejoices in the name of an earth inductor. https://geomag.nrcan.gc.ca/lab/vm/inductor-en.php
Externet Posted November 24 Author Posted November 24 Interesting contraption, thanks. If uses air cored coils, generation should increase with an iron core, right ? This thread triggered from inspecting my defunct portable generator that shows no residual magnetism anywhere at all and has no brushes. Wondering if earth magnetism is used as initial development of field excitation... FC= field coil rotor MC =stator main coil SC=stator coil for capacitor PL=pilot lamp
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