2nd year of post-compulsory secondary education
Magnetic field
José Luis San Emeterio
 Magn.  
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The laws of Faraday and Lenz
 
   The visual on the left shows Faraday's experiment in a qualitative way: you can see a magnet, with its lines of force, and a circuit formed by a coil and a light bulb, without a power supply.

   If we move the magnet through the coil or away from it (dragging the dot in the middle) the bulb will light up. It is the variation of the mangetic flux through the coil that generates a current through the light bulb. This current is known as an induced current.

    You can study the production of induced currents in more detail by clicking on . In this visual, you will be able to study the induced current in a simple circuit when the surface of the circuit is changed and when the field intensity is altered. You will also learn the laws of Faraday and Lenz, which can be summarised in the following expression:

where emf is the induced electromotive force.

    In the section on alternating current you will find how an induced current is produced when the angle between the field vector and the surface of the circuit changes.

Background information
Natural magnets
Lines of force
Magnets and currents
Conclusions
The effects of the magnetic field
on a charged particle
on a straight cable
on a loop
Conclusions
The creation of magnetic fields
by a charged particle
by a rectilinear current
by a coil
An explanation of natural magnetism
Conclusions
Induced currents
Magnetic flux
The laws of Faraday and Lenz
Self-induction
Conclusions
Alternating current
The generation of alternating currents
A circuit of alternating current
Conclusions
Evaluation