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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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Next, let’s calculate the flux through the square after it’s rotated. Now we have <strong>to</strong> take<br />

in<strong>to</strong> account the fact that the square is at an angle of 60º:<br />

So the change in magnetic flux is :<br />

The magnetic flux decreases because, as the square is rotated, fewer magnetic field lines<br />

can pass through it.<br />

Faraday’s Law<br />

We have seen earlier that a bar sliding along rails is a source of induced emf. We have<br />

also seen that it is a source of changing magnetic flux: as it moves, it changes the area<br />

bounded by the bar and the rails. The English scientist Michael Faraday discovered that<br />

this is no coincidence: induced emf is a measure of the change in magnetic flux over time.<br />

This formula is called Faraday’s Law.<br />

Equivalence of Faraday’s Law with E = vBl<br />

The earlier example of a metal bar rolling along tracks <strong>to</strong> induce a current is just a<br />

particular case of the more general Faraday’s Law. If the bar is moving at a constant<br />

velocity v, at which it covers a distance in a time , then:<br />

Because is the same thing as , we get:<br />

Lenz’s Law<br />

Faraday’s Law tells us that a change in magnetic flux induces a current in a loop of<br />

conducting material. However, it doesn’t tell us in what direction that current flows.<br />

According <strong>to</strong> Lenz’s Law, the current flows so that it opposes the change in magnetic<br />

flux by creating its own magnetic field. Using the right-hand rule, we point our thumb in<br />

the opposite direction of the change in magnetic flux, and the direction in which our<br />

fingers wrap in<strong>to</strong> a fist indicates the direction in which current flows.<br />

Lenz’s Law is included in Faraday’s Law by introducing a minus sign:<br />

EXAMPLE<br />

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