ece106: add faraday's law

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eggy 2023-03-29 18:38:30 -04:00
parent 3674ecb909
commit d80949eb51

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@ -639,3 +639,30 @@ The geometries that work include:
2. Choose $dl$ in the direction of $B$ (counterclockwise) 2. Choose $dl$ in the direction of $B$ (counterclockwise)
3. Determine $dS$ (out of the page) and apply Ampere's law 3. Determine $dS$ (out of the page) and apply Ampere's law
$$\hat\phi=\hat z\times\hat r_1$$
!!! warning
A spinning cylinder rotates faster along its outer ring, forcing an integral setup.
### Faraday's law
Faraday's law states relates magnetic flux similarly to electric flux. Where $s$ is the open surface bounded by the conductor:
$$\phi_m=\int_s\vec B\bullet\vec{dS}$$
A flux that changes with time results in an **induced voltage** across the terminals of the conductor. Per Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction, magnetic energy is convertible to electric energy.
$$V_{ind}=-\frac{d}{dt}\phi_m$$
As the electric field is always perpendicular to a magnetic field, this indicates that it will curl around a straight magnetic field.
Relating $dl$ and $dS$ with the right-hand rule accounts for **Lenz's law**.
$$\boxed{\oint\vec E\bullet\vec{d\ell}=\frac{d}{dt}\int\vec B\bullet\vec{dS}}$$
If there is a conducting loop in a time-varying magnetic field, a $V_{ind}$ is formed such that the current is in the direction of the induced field:
$$V_{ind}=\oint\vec E\bullet\vec{d\ell}=-\frac{d}{dt}\int\vec B\bullet\vec{dS}$$
Time-varying magnetic fields are formed if the field or charge is moving or if bounds change.