A magnet is dropped down a conducting copper pipe and feels a resistive force. The falling magnet induces a current in the copper pipe and, by Lenz's Law, the current creates a magnetic field that opposes the changing field of the falling magnet. Thus, the magnet is "repelled" and falls more slowly.
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Saturday, 3 March 2012
Lenz's Law with Copper Pipe
Libellés :
Demonstration,
Electricity and Magnetism,
Electromagnetic induction,
Faraday's Law,
Lenz's Law,
MIT TechTV
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