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Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
Sat Jul 19, 2014, 03:52 AM Jul 2014

Lenz's Law

Lenz's Law

In 1835 Heinrich Lenz stated the law that now bears his name. An electric current induced by a changing magnetic field will flow such that it will create its own magnetic field that opposes the magnetic field that created it. These opposing fields occupying the same space at the same time result in a pair of forces. These forces are felt when you turn a generator and generate electricity. The more current you generate, the greater the force opposing you.

This force can also be felt if you try to drag a conductive, non-magnetic plate between the poles of a horseshoe magnet. The plate sees a changing magnetic field which creates a current in the plate, which creates its own magnetic field opposing the one that created it.


Another great example of Lenz's law is to take a copper tube (it's conductive but non-magnetic) and drop a piece of steel down through the tube. The piece of steel will fall through, as you might expect. It accelerates very close to the acceleration due to gravity. (Only air friction and some possible rubbing against the inside of the tube prevent it from reaching the acceleration due to gravity.)
magnet through tube (current being shown) (23k) Now take the same copper tube and drop a magnet through it (hopefully a strong one, Neodymium or other rare earth magnets work the best) You will notice that the magnet falls very slowly. This is because the copper tube "sees" a changing magnetic field from the falling magnet. This changing magnetic field induces a current in the copper tube.


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Lenz's Law (Original Post) Ichingcarpenter Jul 2014 OP
And the fellow still has all his fingers too! hunter Jul 2014 #1
as an aside defacto7 Jul 2014 #2

hunter

(38,318 posts)
1. And the fellow still has all his fingers too!
Sat Jul 19, 2014, 12:55 PM
Jul 2014

Those big rare earth magnets are scary strong.

A good high school demonstration uses an ordinary copper pipe from the hardware store and a smaller "super magnet" of the sort you can buy in craft stores. You can set it up side-by-side with a clear plastic pipe for comparison.

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
2. as an aside
Sat Jul 19, 2014, 11:16 PM
Jul 2014

The strongest magnets I know of that are available in junk, even junk around the house, are the magnets in hard drives. I've never measured the strength but you really could break a finger slapping those things together without care. Very powerful.

end aside

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