jtotheroc Posted February 4, 2013 Share Posted February 4, 2013 I was wondering what voltage or current, if any, would be produced if the basic magnet through a copper coil experiment had the poles rotated 90 degress so north and south faced the top/bottom of the coil rather than the entry/exit points? The attached image has a baic illustration of this. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elfmotat Posted February 4, 2013 Share Posted February 4, 2013 (edited) To give specific numbers you'd have to know the field B(x,y,z) that the magnet produces. I don't think the outcome of the experiment would be too different - you should get an induced EMF in the coil. EDIT: This is wrong - ignore. Edited February 5, 2013 by elfmotat Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtotheroc Posted February 4, 2013 Author Share Posted February 4, 2013 (edited) To give specific numbers you'd have to know the field B(x,y,z) that the magnet produces. I don't think the outcome of the experiment would be too different - you should get an induced EMF in the coil. Thanks very much for your input. I have posted this question to another forum and got an opposite response written below. What are your thoughts on the below out of interest? Cheers "In that case, by simmetry, if you take any loop of the coil, for every field line that goes through it, if it goes to the negative pole, there must be another simetrical that comes from the positive, so the total flux will be 0, and constant, so there will be no current induced." http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/53078/basic-magnet-through-a-copper-coil-experiment-what-if-poles-were-rotated-90-de Edited February 4, 2013 by jtotheroc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elfmotat Posted February 5, 2013 Share Posted February 5, 2013 Thanks very much for your input. I have posted this question to another forum and got an opposite response written below. What are your thoughts on the below out of interest? Cheers "In that case, by simmetry, if you take any loop of the coil, for every field line that goes through it, if it goes to the negative pole, there must be another simetrical that comes from the positive, so the total flux will be 0, and constant, so there will be no current induced." http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/53078/basic-magnet-through-a-copper-coil-experiment-what-if-poles-were-rotated-90-de The other person is right - I didn't give it enough thought. The change in flux in the first scenario comes from the fact that the field in the cross-section of the coil is gradually decreasing, where in the second scenario the total flux through the cross section shouldn't change. So you shouldn't get any EMF. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Enthalpy Posted February 5, 2013 Share Posted February 5, 2013 Essentially zero effect when the magnet is rotated as on the second drawing. Up to the precision of the angle between the magnet's and the coil's orientations, and secondary effects like eddy currents induced in the thickness of the wire. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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