Electromagnetic Induction Chapter 14 Class 12 Physics MCQs | Second Year Physics Chapter 14 MCQsBy Mr. Suleman / November 17, 2025 2 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171 Electromagnetic Induction Chapter 14 Class 12 Physics MCQs | Second Year Physics Chapter 14 MCQs 1 / 171 A bar magnet's North pole is moved towards a closed loop of wire. To oppose this change, the face of the loop nearest the magnet will effectively become: A North pole to attract the magnet. A North pole to repel the magnet. Electrically neutral with no magnetic poles. A South pole to attract the magnet. As the North pole approaches, the magnetic flux into the loop increases. To oppose this increase, the induced current will create its own magnetic field pointing out of the loop. A magnetic field pointing out from the loop's face acts as a North pole, which will exert a repulsive force on the approaching North pole of the magnet. 2 / 171 A conducting rod of resistance 'R' slides on two parallel, frictionless conducting rails, forming a closed loop in a uniform magnetic field 'B'. If the rod moves with a constant velocity 'v', what is the magnitude of the induced current 'I' in the loop? I = R / (B L v) I = B L v / R I = 0 I = B L v R First, the motional EMF (ε) is induced, with a magnitude of ε = BLv. Since this EMF is generated in a closed circuit with total resistance R, it drives a current according to Ohm's Law (I = ε / R). Substituting the expression for EMF gives I = BLv / R. 3 / 171 An AC generator works by rotating a coil in a magnetic field. This device is a direct practical application of which law? Faraday's Law of Induction Ampere's Law Ohm's Law Coulomb's Law The rotation of the coil continuously changes the angle (θ) between the area and the magnetic field, which in turn causes a continuous change in magnetic flux (ΔΦ/Δt). According to Faraday's Law, this induces a continuously varying (alternating) EMF. 4 / 171 A coil is rotating in a magnetic field. To double the maximum induced EMF, you could: Double the angular velocity. Halve the angular velocity. Double both the number of turns and the angular velocity. Double the resistance of the coil. The maximum induced EMF in a generator is given by ε_max = NABω, where N is the number of turns, A is the area, B is the magnetic field, and ω is the angular velocity. To double ε_max, you can double any one of these factors (N, A, B, or ω). Doubling both N and ω would quadruple the EMF. Halving ω would halve the EMF. Resistance does not affect the magnitude of the EMF. 5 / 171 The phenomenon where a changing current in one coil induces an EMF in a neighboring coil is called: Mutual Induction Eddy Currents Self-Induction Capacitive Reactance Mutual inductance describes the effect where the magnetic field produced by one coil induces a current in a nearby coil. This is the principle behind transformers. 6 / 171 Which of the following actions will NOT induce an EMF in a conducting loop? Keeping the loop stationary in a uniform, constant magnetic field. Changing the strength of the magnetic field through the loop. Moving the loop into or out of a magnetic field. Rotating the loop within a magnetic field. An EMF is induced only when the magnetic flux changes. If the loop is stationary and the magnetic field is uniform and constant, the flux (Φ) does not change over time (ΔΦ/Δt = 0), so no EMF is induced. 7 / 171 Why does an inductor offer opposition (reactance) to the flow of alternating current (AC)? Because the AC current is constantly changing, which continuously generates a back EMF. Because its resistance increases with frequency. Because the inductor's core gets saturated. Because AC current cannot pass through a magnetic field. AC current, by its very nature, is continuously changing its magnitude and direction. This constant change (a non-zero ΔI/Δt) means the inductor is always generating a self-induced EMF that opposes the flow, creating an opposition known as inductive reactance. 8 / 171 The EMF (ε₂) induced in a secondary coil is related to the rate of change of current (ΔI₁/Δt) in the primary coil by which formula? (M = Mutual Inductance) ε₂ = M (Δt / ΔI₁) ε₂ = - I₁ (ΔM / Δt) ε₂ = - M (ΔI₁ / Δt) ε₂ = R₁ (ΔI₁ / Δt) This formula is the mathematical statement of mutual induction. It shows the induced EMF in the secondary (ε₂) is directly proportional to the mutual inductance (M) and the rate at which the current in the primary (ΔI₁/Δt) is changing. The negative sign is a consequence of Lenz's Law. 9 / 171 An induction coil (used to generate high-voltage sparks) has a primary coil with a few turns and a secondary coil with many thousands of turns. This is an example of a device built to: Step down the voltage to a very safe level. Store a large amount of charge. Create a large, steady DC current. Act as a step-up transformer using mutual induction. : By having many more turns in the secondary (N₂ >> N₁), a rapidly changing current in the primary induces a very large EMF (voltage) in the secondary, according to the transformer principle V₂/V₁ ≈ N₂/N₁. 10 / 171 A transformer operates on the principle of: Mutual Induction The Hall Effect Self-Induction Static Electricity A transformer works because a changing current in the primary coil creates a changing magnetic flux. This changing flux is linked to the secondary coil through the core, inducing an EMF in the secondary coil. This process involving two coils is called mutual induction. 11 / 171 How is energy transferred from the primary circuit to the secondary circuit in a system using mutual induction? Through a direct wire connection. Through the transfer of electrons between the coils. Through the emission of light. Through the magnetic field. There is no physical connection between the primary and secondary circuits in a transformer. The energy is carried from the primary coil to the secondary coil via the fluctuating magnetic field that links them. 12 / 171 The technology behind wirelessly charging a smartphone or an electric toothbrush relies on which principle? The Hall effect Static electricity The photoelectric effect Mutual induction The charging base contains a primary coil, and the device to be charged contains a secondary coil. The base generates a changing magnetic field, which induces a current in the device's coil via mutual induction, charging its battery. 13 / 171 An AC motor operates based on which fundamental physical principle? The motor effect, where a current-carrying conductor in a magnetic field experiences a force. The photoelectric effect. The conversion of chemical energy to mechanical energy. Faraday's Law of Induction. The core principle of any electric motor is that when electric current flows through a conductor placed within a magnetic field, the field exerts a force on the conductor, causing it to move. This force creates the torque that turns the motor's shaft. 14 / 171 What is the formula for the potential energy (E) stored in an inductor of inductance 'L' carrying a steady current 'I'? E = I² R E = L I E = (1/2) L I² E = (1/2) L² I This formula gives the total energy stored in the inductor's magnetic field when a constant current 'I' is flowing through it. It is analogous to the energy stored in a capacitor, E = (1/2)CV². 15 / 171 What is the primary function of the stator in a typical AC motor? To transfer power to the rotor using brushes. To act as a heat sink for the motor. To generate a rotating magnetic field using AC power. To rotate and provide mechanical output. The stator is fed with an AC supply, and its coils are arranged in such a way that they produce a magnetic field whose polarity rotates around the stator's inner circumference at a specific speed. 16 / 171 One form of energy loss in an AC motor is due to the repeated magnetization and demagnetization of the iron core. This loss is called: Copper loss (I²R). Eddy current loss. Hysteresis loss. Friction loss. It takes energy to re-align the magnetic domains in the iron core every time the magnetic field produced by the AC reverses. This energy is dissipated as heat and is known as hysteresis loss. 17 / 171 An inductor is connected to a DC power supply. After a long time, the current becomes steady at 3.0 A. What is the self-induced EMF in the inductor at this moment? Infinite. Equal to the supply voltage. Zero. Dependent on the inductance value. Self-induced EMF is only generated when the current is changing (ΔI/Δt is non-zero). If the current is steady and constant, its rate of change is zero, and therefore the self-induced EMF is also zero. At this point, the inductor behaves like a simple connecting wire (with some resistance). 18 / 171 The unit Weber (Wb) is equivalent to which of the following combinations of units? Ampere ⋅ Henry Volt ⋅ second Volt / second Tesla / meter² From Faraday's Law, ε = -ΔΦ/Δt. Rearranging for flux gives ΔΦ = -ε ⋅ Δt. Therefore, the unit for flux (Weber) must be equal to the unit for EMF (Volt) multiplied by the unit for time (second). 19 / 171 The self-induced EMF generated in the spinning armature of a DC motor is often called: Terminal Voltage Forward EMF Rotational EMF Back EMF As the motor's coil (armature) spins in a magnetic field, it acts like a generator, inducing an EMF. By Lenz's law, this induced EMF opposes the applied voltage that is causing the motor to spin, hence it is called "back EMF." 20 / 171 When is the magnetic flux through a plane area at its maximum value? When the plane is held parallel to the magnetic field. When the plane is held at a 45° angle to the magnetic field. The flux is always constant regardless of orientation. When the plane is held perpendicular to the magnetic field. When the plane is perpendicular to the field, the angle (θ) between the field lines and the normal to the area is 0°. Since cos(0°) = 1, the flux (Φ = BA cos(θ)) is maximum (Φ = BA). 21 / 171 If the resistance of a conducting loop is doubled while the rate of change of magnetic flux through it remains constant, what happens to the induced EMF and the induced current? Both EMF and current remain the same. EMF remains the same, but the current is halved. Both EMF and current are halved. EMF is doubled, but the current remains the same. The induced EMF (ε) depends only on the rate of change of flux (ε = -NΔΦ/Δt), so it is unchanged. The induced current is given by Ohm's Law (I = ε/R). If resistance (R) is doubled, the current (I) is halved. 22 / 171 A rectangular loop of wire is pulled out of a uniform magnetic field at a constant velocity. The induced EMF in the loop is: Constantly increasing. Constant and non-zero. Constantly decreasing. Zero. As the loop is pulled out, the area inside the field decreases at a constant rate (since velocity is constant). This causes a constant rate of change of magnetic flux (ΔΦ/Δt is constant), which induces a constant, non-zero EMF. 23 / 171 A conducting ring is placed on top of a solenoid. If the current in the solenoid is suddenly increased, inducing a current in the ring, what will the ring do? It will rotate horizontally. It will be pulled downwards, towards the solenoid. It will remain stationary. It will be pushed upwards, away from the solenoid. Increasing the current in the solenoid increases the upward magnetic flux. By Lenz's law (the consequence of Faraday's Law), the induced current in the ring will create its own downward magnetic field to oppose this change. This opposing field results in a repulsive force, pushing the ring up. 24 / 171 A 0.5-meter-long conductor is moved at a speed of 4 m/s perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field of 0.2 T. What is the magnitude of the induced motional EMF? 10 V 1.0 V 0.4 V 2.5 V The formula for motional EMF is ε = BLv. Plugging in the values: ε = (0.2 T) * (0.5 m) * (4 m/s) = 0.4 V. 25 / 171 A circular loop of area 2 m² is placed in a uniform magnetic field of 3 T. The angle between the magnetic field vector B and the area vector A (normal to the loop's plane) is 60°. What is the magnetic flux? 0 Wb 3 Wb 6 Wb 5.2 Wb The formula for magnetic flux is Φ = BAcos(θ). Here, B = 3 T, A = 2 m², and the angle θ between the field and the normal is given as 60°. Φ = (3 T) * (2 m²) * cos(60°) = 6 * 0.5 = 3 Wb. 26 / 171 A flexible conducting loop is placed in a uniform magnetic field pointing into the page. If the loop is stretched, increasing its area, what happens according to Faraday's Law? An EMF is induced because the magnetic flux through the loop changes. No EMF is induced because the magnetic field is uniform. The magnetic field strength will decrease. The resistance of the loop increases. Magnetic flux is Φ = BAcos(θ). Even if the magnetic field (B) is constant, increasing the area (A) will increase the flux (Φ). Faraday's Law states that any change in flux induces an EMF. 27 / 171 How does the number of turns (N) in a coil affect the magnitude of the induced EMF, according to Faraday's Law (ε = -N ΔΦ/Δt)? The EMF is directly proportional to the number of turns. The EMF is proportional to the square of the number of turns. The number of turns has no effect on the induced EMF. The EMF is inversely proportional to the number of turns. Each turn in the coil experiences the change in magnetic flux. The total induced EMF is the sum of the EMFs induced in each individual turn. Therefore, doubling the number of turns doubles the total induced EMF. 28 / 171 The "turns ratio" (n) of a transformer is commonly defined as n = Ns / Np. If n = 0.5, the transformer is a: Step-up transformer. A faulty transformer. Step-down transformer. 1:1 isolation transformer. A turns ratio less than 1 means that the secondary coil has fewer turns than the primary coil, which results in the voltage being "stepped down." 29 / 171 The negative sign in Faraday's Law, ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt), is a direct consequence of which physical principle? Conservation of Momentum Conservation of Charge Conservation of Energy (Lenz's Law) Ohm's Law The negative sign represents Lenz's Law, which states that the induced current will flow in a direction that creates a magnetic field opposing the change in flux. This opposition ensures that work must be done to induce the current, thus conserving energy. 30 / 171 What is "copper loss" in a transformer, and how is it reduced? Heat loss due to eddy currents; reduced by laminations. Heat loss due to resistance in the windings; reduced by using thicker wire. The cost of copper; reduced by using aluminum. Flux leakage; reduced by a good core design. Copper loss refers to the I²R heating that occurs in the copper windings themselves. Using a wire with a larger cross-sectional area (thicker wire) decreases its resistance (R), thereby minimizing this power loss. 31 / 171 The armature coil in a generator is wound on a soft iron core that is laminated (made of thin, insulated sheets). What is the purpose of these laminations? To strengthen the magnetic field. To make the armature lighter. To reduce energy losses from eddy currents. To increase the generator's voltage. The changing magnetic flux induces unwanted circulating currents (eddy currents) within the iron core itself. These currents generate heat and waste energy. By using thin, insulated sheets, the paths for these currents are broken up, significantly reducing their size and the associated energy loss. 32 / 171 Why does a large spark often jump across the contacts of a switch when it is opened in a high-current circuit containing a large inductor (like a motor)? The rapidly collapsing magnetic field induces a very large back EMF that ionizes the air in the gap. The switch contacts melt easily. The sudden stop of electrons releases static electricity. The power supply momentarily surges. Opening the switch causes the current to drop to zero very quickly (Δt is tiny). From ε = -L(ΔI/Δt), a very small Δt results in a huge induced EMF. This voltage can be thousands of volts, easily strong enough to break down the air between the switch contacts and create a spark or arc. 33 / 171 When a strong magnet is dropped down a thick copper tube, it falls much slower than it would in the air. This is because: The copper tube has very high air resistance. The magnet temporarily sticks to the copper. The falling magnet creates a changing flux, inducing eddy currents in the tube that produce an upward retarding force. The Earth's magnetic field repels the falling magnet inside the tube. This is a classic demonstration of Lenz's Law and eddy currents. The motion of the magnet induces currents in the copper wall. These currents create a magnetic field that opposes the magnet's motion, resulting in a drag force that slows its descent significantly. 34 / 171 If a steady, constant 5 A DC current flows through the primary coil, what is the EMF induced in the secondary coil? It depends on the mutual inductance M. Zero. A steady DC voltage. An alternating voltage. Mutual induction requires a change in current (ΔI₁/Δt ≠ 0). If the current is constant, the magnetic flux is also constant, and no EMF is induced in the secondary coil. 35 / 171 Faraday's Law of Induction states that the magnitude of the induced EMF in a circuit is directly proportional to: The rate of change of magnetic flux. The resistance of the circuit. The size of the loop. The strength of the magnetic field. Faraday's Law is a fundamental principle stating that a changing magnetic flux (ΔΦ/Δt) through a loop induces an electromotive force (EMF). A faster change results in a larger induced EMF. 36 / 171 How does an AC induction motor work without any direct electrical connection (like brushes) to its rotor? The rotor is a permanent magnet that simply follows the stator's field. The motor uses static electricity to turn the rotor. The rotor is connected to a separate DC power supply. The stator's rotating magnetic field induces a current in the rotor, which then creates its own magnetic field. This is the principle of mutual induction. The changing magnetic field from the stator induces eddy currents in the rotor's conductive bars. These induced currents create a magnetic field in the rotor that interacts with the stator's field, producing torque. 37 / 171 What is the primary undesirable effect of eddy currents in the iron core of a transformer? They reverse the direction of the current in the secondary coil. They increase the magnetic flux. They cause energy loss by generating unwanted heat (I²R heating). They cause the transformer to become permanently magnetized. The circulating eddy currents flow through the resistance of the iron core, dissipating power in the form of heat. This reduces the efficiency of the transformer as electrical energy is wasted as thermal energy. 38 / 171 The efficiency of a transformer is defined as the ratio of: Primary power to secondary power (Pin / Pout). Primary voltage to secondary voltage (Vp / Vs). Secondary power to primary power (Pout / Pin). Secondary current to primary current (Is / Ip). Efficiency measures how well the transformer converts input power to useful output power. Since real transformers have losses, the output power is always slightly less than the input power, so this ratio is typically expressed as a percentage (e.g., 98% efficient). 39 / 171 In the context of a practical generator, what does the term "armature" usually refer to? The rotating coil in which the EMF is induced. The external circuit or load. The frame or housing of the generator. The stationary magnets. The armature is the power-producing component of a generator, which consists of the coil of wire wound on an iron core that rotates in the magnetic field. 40 / 171 In an AC generator, when the magnetic flux through the coil is at its maximum, the induced EMF is: At half its maximum value. Zero. Negative and maximum. Also at its maximum. The induced EMF depends on the rate of change of flux. When the flux itself is maximum (coil perpendicular to field), its rate of change is momentarily zero. This means flux and EMF are 90 degrees out of phase. 41 / 171 The magnetic flux through a single loop of wire changes from 8 Wb to 3 Wb in 0.5 seconds. What is the magnitude of the induced EMF? 10 V 22 V 5 V 2.5 V Using Faraday's Law, ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt). Here, N=1, ΔΦ = (Final Flux - Initial Flux) = (3 Wb - 8 Wb) = -5 Wb, and Δt = 0.5 s. So, ε = -1 * (-5 Wb / 0.5 s) = 10 V. The magnitude is 10 V. 42 / 171 Which of the following factors does NOT affect the magnitude of the induced EMF in a coil? The resistance of the coil. The rate of change of magnetic flux. The strength of the magnetic field. The number of turns in the coil. According to Faraday's Law, the induced EMF depends on the number of turns, the magnetic field strength, and the rate of change of magnetic flux. The resistance of the coil affects the induced current (I = EMF/R), but not the induced EMF itself. 43 / 171 The two main parts of a simple AC induction motor are the: Slip rings and magnets. Armature and field coil. Stator and rotor. Commutator and brushes. The stator is the stationary outer part that contains coils to produce a magnetic field. The rotor is the inner part that is "induced" to rotate by the stator's magnetic field. 44 / 171 A conducting rod of length 'L' is rotated with a constant angular velocity 'ω' in a uniform magnetic field 'B' about one of its ends, with the field perpendicular to the plane of rotation. The induced EMF between the ends of the rod is: ε = B L ω ε = B L² ω ε = 0 ε = (1/2) B L² ω Not all parts of the rod move at the same speed. The tip moves fastest (v = Lω) while the pivot point is stationary (v=0). The EMF is calculated by integrating the small EMFs (dε = B v dr) along the length of the rod. This integration yields the result ε = (1/2)BL²ω, representing the average effect across the entire length. 45 / 171 An AC generator functions based on which fundamental principle of physics? Ohm's Law Faraday's Law of Electromagnetic Induction. The heating effect of current. Coulomb's Law of electrostatic attraction. An AC generator works by rotating a coil of wire in a magnetic field. This process continuously changes the magnetic flux through the coil, which, according to Faraday's Law, induces an electromotive force (EMF) and drives a current. 46 / 171 A flat coil of wire is rotating in a uniform magnetic field. At which orientation of the coil is the rate of change of flux at its maximum? The rate of change is constant throughout the rotation. When the plane of the coil is at a 45° angle to the magnetic field. When the plane of the coil is parallel to the magnetic field. When the plane of the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field. When the coil is parallel to the field, its edges are cutting through the magnetic field lines at the fastest possible rate. Although the flux is zero at this instant, its rate of change (ΔΦ/Δt) is maximum, inducing the maximum EMF. 47 / 171 Which of the following actions would NOT increase the peak voltage output of an AC generator? Increasing the number of turns in the coil. Increasing the speed of rotation. Increasing the resistance of the external circuit. Using a stronger magnet. The induced EMF (voltage) depends on N, B, A, and ω. The resistance of the external circuit (load) will affect the current that flows (I = V/R), but it does not change the voltage generated by the machine itself. 48 / 171 A vertical conductor is moving horizontally to the east through a magnetic field that points directly north. Using the right-hand rule for a positive charge, which end of the conductor becomes positively charged? The bottom end. Neither end, the EMF is zero. The east end. The top end. Using the right-hand rule: Point your fingers in the direction of the velocity (East). Curl your fingers (or point your palm) in the direction of the magnetic field (North). Your thumb points in the direction of the force on positive charges, which is Up. Therefore, the top end of the conductor accumulates positive charge. 49 / 171 A straight conductor of length 'L' is moving with a velocity 'v' perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field 'B'. What is the correct formula for the magnitude of the induced motional EMF (ε)? ε = B L / v ε = B L² v ε = B L v ε = B / (L v) This is the standard formula for motional EMF when the velocity, length, and magnetic field are all mutually perpendicular. The EMF is directly proportional to the magnetic field strength, the length of the conductor in the field, and the speed of the conductor. 50 / 171 In an ideal transformer (100% efficient), how does the input power (Pin) relate to the output power (Pout)? Pin is equal to Pout. Pin is always greater than Pout. Pin is always less than Pout. The relationship depends on the turns ratio. An ideal transformer has no energy losses. Therefore, by the law of conservation of energy, the power supplied to the primary coil must be equal to the power delivered by the secondary coil. 51 / 171 Which of the following changes would INCREASE the self-inductance of a solenoid? Decreasing its cross-sectional area. Decreasing the number of turns. Removing its iron core and leaving it air-cored. Increasing the number of turns per unit length. The inductance of a solenoid is given by L = μ₀n²Al, where n is the number of turns per unit length. Increasing n, the area A, the length l, or inserting a ferromagnetic core (which increases μ) will all increase the inductance. 52 / 171 What is the SI unit for mutual inductance? Tesla (T) Weber (Wb) Farad (F) Henry (H) Both self-inductance and mutual inductance are measured in Henries (H). One Henry represents the scenario where a current changing at one ampere per second in the primary induces an EMF of one volt in the secondary. 53 / 171 A change of current of 10 A/s in a primary coil induces an EMF of 5 V in a secondary coil. What is the mutual inductance between them? 50 H 2.0 H 0.5 H 0.2 H Rearrange the formula: M = |ε₂ / (ΔI₁/Δt)|. M = | 5 V / (10 A/s) | = 0.5 V·s/A = 0.5 H. 54 / 171 A 500-turn coil is in a magnetic field. The total flux through the coil is 0.02 Wb. If the field collapses to zero in 0.1 seconds, what is the average induced EMF? 50 V 100 V 1 V 10 V N = 500, ΔΦ = 0 - 0.02 Wb = -0.02 Wb, Δt = 0.1 s. Using ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt) = -500 * (-0.02 Wb / 0.1 s) = -500 * (-0.2 Wb/s) = 100 V. The average induced EMF is 100 V. 55 / 171 An inductor does not dissipate energy like a resistor but stores it. In what form is energy stored in an inductor? As kinetic energy of the electrons. In its magnetic field. As thermal energy. In its electric field. The work done to push current against the back EMF is stored as potential energy in the magnetic field that is established in and around the coil. 56 / 171 When a solid metal plate swings through a strong magnetic field, it slows down rapidly. This braking effect is a practical application of Lenz's Law because: Eddy currents are induced in the plate, and their magnetic fields create a retarding force. The metal becomes permanently magnetized. The resistance of the metal plate increases significantly. The magnetic field reverses its polarity. As the plate enters the field, the changing flux induces circulating currents (eddy currents). According to Lenz's Law, these currents create magnetic poles that are repelled by the main field. As the plate exits, the flux decreases, and the induced eddy currents create poles that are attracted back into the field. Both actions produce a force that opposes the motion, causing the plate to slow down. 57 / 171 What is the direct cause of a self-induced EMF in a coil? The presence of a capacitor in the circuit. A change in the magnetic flux produced by the coil's own current. The resistance of the coil wire. The steady flow of DC current. A current in a coil creates a magnetic field and thus a magnetic flux. If this current changes, the flux it produces also changes. According to Faraday's Law, this change in self-flux induces an EMF in the coil itself. 58 / 171 Many single-phase AC motors (like those in fans or pumps) use a capacitor. What is its main purpose? To store charge for when the power goes out. To reduce the overall current drawn by the motor. To filter out noise from the power line. To create a phase shift in the current for one winding, which helps produce a rotating magnetic field to start the motor. A single-phase supply creates a pulsating, not a rotating, magnetic field. The capacitor shifts the phase of the current in an auxiliary "start" winding relative to the main winding. This creates two out-of-phase fields, which combine to produce the rotating magnetic field needed to get the motor started. 59 / 171 The current drawn by an AC motor is highest when it is first starting up and lowest when it is running at full speed. Why? Because at the start, there is no back EMF, but at full speed, the back EMF is large and opposes the supply voltage. Because the power supply provides a surge of current to start the motor. Because the motor's resistance is lowest at the start. Because the starting capacitor uses a lot of current. The net voltage driving the current is (V_supply - V_back_EMF). At startup, V_back_EMF is zero, so the current is high (I = V_supply / Impedance). As the motor speeds up, V_back_EMF increases, reducing the net voltage and thus reducing the running current. 60 / 171 A "universal motor" is a special type of motor that can run on either AC or DC power. It is constructed like a: DC series motor with a commutator and brushes. Brushless DC motor. Standard AC induction motor. Synchronous motor. In a series-wound DC motor, the field current and armature current are the same. If you apply AC, both currents reverse direction together. This means the direction of torque remains the same, allowing the motor to run. These are common in power tools and blenders. 61 / 171 A rectangular wire loop moves with a constant velocity entirely within a uniform magnetic field. Why is the induced EMF zero? Because the magnetic field is uniform. Because the magnetic flux through the loop is constant. Because the velocity is constant. Because the resistance of the wire is too high. As the loop moves, the area of the loop inside the field does not change. Since the field strength is also uniform, the total magnetic flux (Φ = BA) remains constant. With no change in flux (ΔΦ/Δt = 0), Faraday's Law predicts zero induced EMF. 62 / 171 The peak or maximum EMF (ε₀) produced by an AC generator with N turns, area A, rotating at angular velocity ω in a magnetic field B is given by: ε₀ = NBA / ω ε₀ = BAω / N ε₀ = NBA ε₀ = NBAω The maximum induced EMF is directly proportional to the number of turns (N), the strength of the magnetic field (B), the area of the coil (A), and the angular velocity (ω) or speed of rotation. 63 / 171 The current in a 2.0 H inductor changes from 5.0 A to 1.0 A in 0.5 seconds. What is the magnitude of the average self-induced EMF? 8.0 V 4.0 V 16 V 1.0 V Use ε = -L(ΔI/Δt). Here, L = 2.0 H, ΔI = (Final I - Initial I) = 1.0 A - 5.0 A = -4.0 A, and Δt = 0.5 s. The rate of change ΔI/Δt = -4.0 A / 0.5 s = -8.0 A/s. The magnitude is |ε| = | -L(ΔI/Δt) | = | -(2.0 H)(-8.0 A/s) | = 16 V. 64 / 171 Under which of the following conditions will the induced EMF in a conducting loop be exactly zero? The loop is held stationary in a magnetic field that is not changing. The loop is moving at a constant velocity in a uniform magnetic field. The loop is stationary, but the magnet producing the field is rotating. The loop is shrinking in size within a uniform magnetic field. For an EMF to be induced, the magnetic flux must change. If the loop is stationary, its area and orientation are constant. If the magnetic field is also constant, the flux (Φ) does not change (ΔΦ/Δt = 0), and thus the induced EMF is zero. 65 / 171 When a DC motor is first switched on, the initial current is very high. As the motor speeds up, the current drops. Why? The back EMF increases with speed, opposing the applied voltage and reducing the net voltage. The magnetic field from the field coils gets weaker. The power supply voltage decreases. The motor's resistance increases as it heats up. The net voltage across the armature is V_net = V_applied - ε_back. The current is I = V_net / R. At the start, speed is zero, so ε_back is zero, and the current is high. As speed increases, ε_back increases, reducing V_net and therefore reducing the current drawn by the motor. 66 / 171 The speed of the rotating magnetic field in the stator of an AC motor is called the: Angular velocity. Rotor speed. Synchronous speed. Slip speed. The synchronous speed is the fixed speed at which the magnetic field rotates. It is determined by the frequency of the AC power supply and the number of magnetic poles in the stator. 67 / 171 A simple generator's coil rotates at a speed of 3000 revolutions per minute (RPM). What is the frequency of the AC output in Hertz (Hz)? 60 Hz 3000 Hz 50 Hz 100 Hz Frequency is revolutions per second. To convert RPM to Hz, divide by 60. Frequency = 3000 revolutions/minute * (1 minute / 60 seconds) = 50 revolutions/second = 50 Hz. 68 / 171 What is the defining characteristic of a synchronous AC motor? It does not produce a back EMF. It has no rotor windings. It can only run on DC power. Its rotor turns at the exact same speed as the synchronous speed (zero slip). A synchronous motor's rotor is typically an electromagnet or permanent magnet that "locks in" with the rotating magnetic field of the stator and rotates in perfect synchrony with it. This is different from an induction motor, which must have slip. 69 / 171 What is the SI unit for inductance? Weber (Wb) Farad (F) Tesla (T) Henry (H) The SI unit of inductance is the Henry (H), named after American scientist Joseph Henry. 70 / 171 A transformer uses a changing current in a primary coil to induce a current in a secondary coil. This device works due to: The motor principle. Static electricity. Faraday's Law applied to mutual inductance. The heating effect of current. The AC current in the primary coil creates a continuously changing magnetic flux. This changing flux is coupled to the secondary coil through an iron core. According to Faraday's Law, this changing flux induces an EMF in the secondary coil. This is known as mutual induction. 71 / 171 In a transformer diagram, the primary winding (or coil) is defined as: The coil with the greater number of turns. The coil with the thicker wire. The coil connected to the load. The coil connected to the input power source. By definition, the winding that receives energy from the AC source is called the primary winding. The winding that delivers energy to the load is the secondary winding. 72 / 171 The "coefficient of coupling" (k) between two coils describes the fraction of flux linkage. What does a value of k = 1 signify? All of the magnetic flux from the primary coil passes through the secondary coil. The coils are very far apart. The coils have the same number of turns. There is no flux linkage at all. A coefficient of coupling of k=1 represents a perfect or ideal linkage, where 100% of the flux is coupled. This is the ideal goal for transformers, which use iron cores to get k very close to 1. 73 / 171 As the rotor of an AC motor spins, it also acts like a generator. The voltage it produces, which opposes the supply voltage, is called: Terminal voltage. Inductive reactance. Back EMF (Counter-electromotive force). Forward EMF. As the rotor's conductors cut through the stator's magnetic field lines, an EMF is induced in them according to Faraday's Law. Lenz's Law dictates that this induced EMF must oppose the current that causes the rotation, hence it is a "back" or "counter" EMF. 74 / 171 A straight conductor of length 'L' moves with a velocity 'v' perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field 'B'. The motional EMF induced across its ends is given by: B L v^2 B L v B L / v B v / L The motional EMF is induced due to the movement of a conductor in a magnetic field. The formula E = Bvl calculates this EMF, where B is the magnetic field strength, l is the length of the conductor, and v is its velocity perpendicular to the field. 75 / 171 The electric field created by a changing magnetic flux is different from the electrostatic field created by stationary charges. The electric field from induction is: Only present inside the conductor. Conservative (path-independent). Non-conservative (forms closed loops). Always directed towards the source. A key consequence of Faraday's Law is that a changing B-field creates a curly, non-conservative E-field (its field lines form closed loops). The work done by this field around a closed path is the induced EMF, which is non-zero. 76 / 171 How is the unwanted effect of eddy currents minimized in the core of a motor or transformer? By constructing the core from thin, insulated sheets of metal called laminations. By using a non-conductive material like plastic for the core. By using a solid block of soft iron. By actively cooling the core with a fan. Laminations break up the large conductive paths within the core. This confines the eddy currents to very small, individual loops within each thin sheet, dramatically increasing the overall resistance and reducing the magnitude of the currents and heat loss. 77 / 171 A Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) protects against electric shock by using a sensing coil. It works on the principle that a change in which quantity will induce an EMF and trip the circuit? The voltage from the power company. The resistance of the appliance. The temperature of the wires. The net magnetic flux through the sensing coil. A GFCI compares the current going out to an appliance with the current returning. Normally, these are equal and their magnetic fields cancel, so the net flux is zero. If some current "leaks" to the ground, the currents become unequal, creating a net change in magnetic flux that induces an EMF in the sensing coil and trips the breaker. 78 / 171 What is the synchronous speed of a 4-pole AC motor connected to a standard 60 Hz power supply? 1200 RPM 1800 RPM 3600 RPM 900 RPM Using the formula Ns = 120f / P: Ns = (120 * 60 Hz) / 4 poles = 7200 / 4 = 1800 RPM. 79 / 171 When the current flowing through an inductor is increasing, the self-induced EMF (or back EMF) acts like: A broken switch, stopping the current completely. A resistor, dissipating heat. A source of EMF (like a battery) in the same direction as the current. A source of EMF (like a battery) in the opposite direction to the current. To oppose the increase in current, the induced EMF must push against the flow of charge, effectively acting like a battery connected in reverse to the main power source. 80 / 171 Why do commercial power plants use three-phase generators? They produce DC voltage directly. They only require one wire for transmission. They are cheaper to build than single-phase generators. They deliver a smoother, more constant power output to the grid. A three-phase generator has three separate coils. The power output from each phase peaks at a different time. When combined, the total power delivered is nearly constant, which is much more efficient for running large industrial motors and for transmission. 81 / 171 What does magnetic flux measure? The potential energy stored in a magnetic field. The force exerted by a magnetic field on a moving charge. The total number of magnetic field lines passing through a given area. The strength of the magnetic field at a single point. Magnetic flux (Φ) is a measurement of the total magnetic field lines that pass through a specific surface area. A higher flux indicates more field lines are passing through. 82 / 171 Electromagnetic brakes on trains or roller coasters use eddy currents to slow down. How do they achieve this? The heat generated by eddy currents is used to power a reverse motor. A strong electromagnet is brought near a rotating metal disc, inducing eddy currents whose magnetic field opposes the rotation. The eddy currents physically wear down the brake pads. The eddy currents increase the friction between the wheels and the track. As the metal disc (connected to the wheel) rotates through the magnetic field, eddy currents are induced. These currents create a magnetic force that acts in the opposite direction to the motion, producing a smooth, contactless braking force. 83 / 171 According to Lenz's Law, the magnetic field produced by eddy currents will always: Be zero. Be perpendicular to the main magnetic field. Assist the main magnetic field. Oppose the change in magnetic flux that is causing them. This is the key characteristic of eddy currents. They create a magnetic field that pushes or pulls against the source of the changing flux. This opposition is the reason for effects like electromagnetic damping and braking. 84 / 171 What happens if a standard transformer is connected to a DC power source? It steps up the DC voltage. It does not work because the magnetic flux is not changing. It works normally but at a lower voltage. It works, but the output will be AC. Transformers require a changing magnetic flux to induce an EMF. A DC source provides a constant current, which creates a constant, unchanging magnetic flux. Therefore, no induction occurs, and the transformer will not operate (and may even overheat due to the low DC resistance of the primary coil). 85 / 171 Lenz's Law is a direct consequence of which fundamental conservation principle? Conservation of Charge Conservation of Momentum Conservation of Energy Conservation of Mass The opposition described by Lenz's Law means that you must do mechanical work to push a magnet into a coil (or pull it out). This work is converted into the electrical energy of the induced current. If the induced current assisted the change, it would create energy from nothing, which is impossible. 86 / 171 How does a transformer affect the frequency of the AC electricity? It halves the frequency. It doubles the frequency. It converts the frequency to 0 Hz (DC). It has no effect on the frequency. A transformer changes voltage and current levels, but the rate at which the magnetic field alternates is determined by the input frequency. The output voltage and current will alternate at the exact same frequency as the input. 87 / 171 When a switch is opened in a DC circuit with an inductor, the current starts to decrease rapidly. The self-induced EMF will: Immediately drop to zero. Reverse the direction of the magnetic field. Act in a direction to speed up the decrease in current. Act in a direction to try and maintain the current. To oppose the decrease in current, the induced EMF will act in the same direction as the original current flow, trying to "prop up" the falling current. This can cause a large voltage spike and a spark across the switch contacts. 88 / 171 An EMF of 12 V is induced in a 100-turn coil over a period of 4 seconds. What was the total change in magnetic flux (ΔΦ) during this time? 4800 Wb 300 Wb 0.03 Wb 0.48 Wb Rearrange Faraday's Law: ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt) becomes ΔΦ = -ε(Δt)/N. ΔΦ = -(12 V * 4 s) / 100 = -48 / 100 = -0.48 Wb. The magnitude of the change in flux is 0.48 Wb. 89 / 171 An induction furnace uses eddy currents to melt metal without any direct flame. The principle is to: Place the metal in a rapidly changing magnetic field, which induces enormous and powerful eddy currents. Pass a huge DC current directly through the metal. Lower the melting point of the metal using a chemical reaction. Use a laser to heat the metal. By subjecting the conductive metal to a very high-frequency changing magnetic field, extremely large eddy currents are induced. The immense heat generated by these currents (P = I²R) is sufficient to melt the metal. 90 / 171 A transformer is considered a "step-up" transformer if: The primary coil has more turns than the secondary coil (Np > Ns). Both coils have the same number of turns. The secondary coil has more turns than the primary coil (Ns > Np). The input voltage is higher than the output voltage. The voltage induced in a coil is directly proportional to the number of turns. To increase or "step up" the voltage, the secondary coil must have more turns than the primary coil. 91 / 171 Faraday's Law of Induction describes how a voltage (or EMF) can be generated in a conducting loop. What is the fundamental condition required for this to happen? The magnetic flux through the loop must be changing. The loop must be connected to a power source. A very strong magnetic field must be present. The loop must have very low resistance. The central idea of Faraday's Law is that an electromotive force (EMF) is induced only when the amount of magnetic flux passing through a circuit changes over time. A constant, unchanging flux produces no induced EMF. 92 / 171 According to Faraday's Law of Electromagnetic Induction, an electromotive force (EMF) is induced in a conductor whenever: The magnetic flux linked with the conductor changes. The conductor is made of a specific material. The conductor is placed in a constant magnetic field. The conductor is connected to a battery. Faraday's Law states that the magnitude of the induced EMF is directly proportional to the rate of change of magnetic flux through the circuit. A constant magnetic field does not induce an EMF. 93 / 171 A 100-turn coil with an area of 0.05 m² rotates in a 0.2 T magnetic field at a frequency of 50 Hz. What is the approximate peak EMF generated? (Note: ω = 2πf) 314 V 500 V 50 V 157 V First, calculate ω = 2πf = 2 * π * 50 Hz ≈ 314 rad/s. Then, use ε₀ = NBAω = (100) * (0.2 T) * (0.05 m²) * (314 rad/s) = 1 * 314 V = 314 V. 94 / 171 The magnitude of eddy currents would be GREATER in a material that has: Higher electrical resistance. Lower electrical conductivity. Lower electrical resistivity. Lower magnetic permeability. Electrical resistivity is a measure of how strongly a material opposes the flow of electric current. A material with low resistivity (or high conductivity) allows for larger currents to flow for a given induced EMF. Therefore, strong eddy currents are formed in good conductors like copper and aluminum. 95 / 171 In a simple AC generator, when is the magnetic flux through the coil at its maximum value? The flux is never at a maximum. When the induced EMF is at half its maximum value. When the induced EMF is also at its maximum. When the induced EMF is zero. The flux is maximum when the plane of the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field (cos(0°)=1). At this precise instant, the coil is moving parallel to the field lines, so its rate of cutting the flux is zero. Thus, the rate of change of flux (ΔΦ/Δt) is zero, and the induced EMF is zero. 96 / 171 In a moving coil galvanometer, the coil is wound on an aluminum frame to provide damping. This works because: Aluminum has high resistance, which stops the current quickly. As the frame oscillates in the galvanometer's magnetic field, eddy currents are induced which oppose the oscillation. Aluminum is very light, allowing the coil to move easily. The aluminum frame acts as a heat sink. The aluminum frame is a conductor. When the coil swings, the frame also moves through the magnetic field, inducing eddy currents. These currents create a drag force that opposes the swinging motion, helping the needle settle quickly at the correct reading without oscillating back and forth. 97 / 171 The essential components of a simple AC generator are a magnetic field, a rotating coil, and: A step-up transformer. A capacitor. A split-ring commutator. A pair of slip rings and carbon brushes. The slip rings rotate with the coil, and the stationary carbon brushes press against them to provide a continuous connection, allowing the induced AC current to be transferred to the external circuit. 98 / 171 Self-induction is the phenomenon in which a changing current in a coil induces an EMF in: A nearby, separate coil. The magnetic core of the coil only. The same coil. The power source supplying the current. Self-induction is the property of a single coil to induce a voltage (EMF) in itself whenever the current flowing through it changes. This induced EMF is often called a "back EMF." 99 / 171 The relationship between the self-induced EMF (ε), the inductance (L), and the rate of change of current (ΔI/Δt) is given by: ε = L (Δt / ΔI) ε = -L (ΔI / Δt) ε = -I (ΔL / Δt) ε = R (ΔI / Δt) This is the fundamental formula for self-induction. The EMF is directly proportional to the inductance (L) and the rate at which the current changes. The negative sign represents Lenz's Law. 100 / 171 Mutual induction is the phenomenon where a changing current in one coil: Causes the resistance of both coils to increase. Induces an EMF in the same coil. Induces an EMF in a neighboring coil. Creates a steady magnetic field between the two coils. Mutual induction specifically describes the interaction between two separate coils. A change in current in the first (primary) coil causes a change in its magnetic flux, which then links with and induces an EMF in the second (secondary) coil. 101 / 171 The most common type of rotor used in AC induction motors, consisting of conductive bars shorted at the ends by rings, is known as a: Commutator rotor. Wire-wound rotor. Salient pole rotor. Squirrel cage rotor. This design is simple, rugged, and reliable. It gets its name because the structure of the bars and end rings resembles a hamster or squirrel exercise wheel. 102 / 171 The mutual inductance from coil 1 to coil 2 is M₁₂. The mutual inductance from coil 2 to coil 1 is M₂₁. The reciprocity theorem states that: M₁₂ is always greater than M₂₁. M₂₁ is always greater than M₁₂. The two are unrelated. M₁₂ = M₂₁. A remarkable property of mutual inductance is that it is symmetric. The effect that coil 1 has on coil 2 is exactly equal to the effect that coil 2 has on coil 1. For this reason, we usually just write it as 'M' instead of M₁₂ or M₂₁. 103 / 171 If the rate at which the magnetic flux changes through a coil is doubled, what happens to the magnitude of the induced EMF? It is halved. It is doubled. It is quartered. It remains the same. The magnitude of the induced EMF is directly proportional to the rate of change of magnetic flux (|ε| = N |ΔΦ/Δt|). Therefore, if the rate (ΔΦ/Δt) is doubled, the EMF will also be doubled. 104 / 171 How can the direction of rotation of a three-phase AC induction motor be reversed? By increasing the frequency of the AC supply. By physically turning the motor around. By reversing the polarity of the DC supply to the rotor. By swapping any two of the three power leads connected to the stator. Swapping any two of the three phases reverses the sequence in which the coils are energized, which in turn reverses the direction of the rotating magnetic field in the stator, causing the rotor to spin in the opposite direction. 105 / 171 An AC generator works on the principle of: Electromagnetic Induction Magnetic effect of a steady current Heating effect of current Chemical effect of current An AC generator converts mechanical energy into electrical energy by rotating a coil in a magnetic field, which induces an alternating current due to the continuous change in magnetic flux. 106 / 171 A straight conducting rod of length 'L' moves with velocity 'v' perpendicular to a magnetic field 'B'. This phenomenon, where an EMF is created due to motion, is called: Hall Effect Seebeck Effect Photoelectric Effect Motional EMF Motional EMF is the EMF induced in a conductor moving through a constant magnetic field. The magnetic force on the charges within the conductor separates them, creating a potential difference. 107 / 171 What is the SI unit for magnetic flux? Gauss (G) Henry (H) Weber (Wb) Tesla (T) The SI unit for magnetic flux is the Weber (Wb). One Weber is equivalent to one Tesla-meter squared (T·m²). 108 / 171 For a conductor moving in a uniform magnetic field, the induced motional EMF will be at its maximum value when the conductor moves: The EMF is always constant regardless of direction. At a 45° angle to the magnetic field lines. Parallel to the magnetic field lines. Perpendicular to the magnetic field lines. The formula is ε = BLvsin(θ). The sine function has a maximum value of 1 when the angle θ is 90°. This means the velocity vector is perpendicular to the magnetic field vector, resulting in the maximum possible force on the charges and the maximum induced EMF. 109 / 171 What is the primary energy conversion that takes place in an AC motor? Electrical energy to mechanical energy. Electrical energy to heat energy. Mechanical energy to electrical energy. Chemical energy to mechanical energy. An AC motor is a device that takes electrical energy from an AC power source and converts it into useful mechanical energy in the form of rotation. 110 / 171 Eddy currents are induced currents in a conductor when it is: Placed in a changing magnetic field. Placed in a uniform and constant magnetic field. Both (b) and (c). Moved through a uniform and constant magnetic field. Eddy currents are loops of electric current induced within conductors by a changing magnetic field in the conductor, according to Faraday's law of induction. This can happen by moving the conductor through a magnetic field or by placing it in a time-varying magnetic field. 111 / 171 What is the primary purpose of the soft iron core in a transformer? To increase the resistance of the windings. To provide electrical insulation between the coils. To reduce the overall weight of the transformer. To concentrate the magnetic flux and ensure maximum linkage between the coils. Soft iron is highly permeable to magnetic fields. It effectively guides almost all of the magnetic flux from the primary coil through to the secondary coil, making the mutual induction process highly efficient. 112 / 171 What key component distinguishes a simple DC generator from a simple AC generator? The number of turns in the coil. A DC generator uses a split-ring commutator instead of slip rings. A DC generator does not require carbon brushes. The strength of the magnets. The split-ring commutator is the crucial difference. It acts as a mechanical switch, reversing the connection to the external circuit every half-rotation to ensure the output current always flows in the same direction (DC). 113 / 171 When is the magnetic flux through a plane area equal to zero? When the plane is held at a 45° angle to the magnetic field. When the plane is held perpendicular to the magnetic field. When the plane is held parallel to the magnetic field. When the area of the plane is very large. When the plane is parallel to the magnetic field, the field lines do not pass through the area. The angle (θ) between the field and the normal is 90°, and since cos(90°) = 0, the flux is zero. 114 / 171 According to Lenz's Law, the direction of the self-induced EMF is always such that it: Opposes the change in current that produces it. Increases the magnetic flux. Assists the flow of current. Remains in the same direction as the main current. Lenz's Law dictates the direction of the induced EMF. If the main current is increasing, the self-induced EMF will oppose this increase. If the main current is decreasing, the induced EMF will try to keep it flowing. It always opposes the change. 115 / 171 A north pole of a bar magnet is moved towards a closed circular loop of wire. The induced current in the loop will flow in a direction that creates a: No induced current will flow. South pole to attract the magnet. North pole to attract the magnet. North pole to repel the magnet. According to Lenz's Law, the induced current will create a magnetic field to oppose the change. As the north pole approaches, the flux increases. To oppose this, the loop will create its own north pole on the side facing the magnet, repelling it. 116 / 171 A circular loop with a radius of 1 m is in a uniform magnetic field of 2 T. The plane of the loop makes an angle of 60° with the magnetic field lines. What is the magnetic flux through the loop? (Note: sin(60°) ≈ 0.866, cos(60°) = 0.5, sin(30°) = 0.5, cos(30°) ≈ 0.866) 1.732π Wb π Wb 2π Wb 0.5π Wb The angle 'θ' in the formula Φ = BAcos(θ) is the angle between the magnetic field and the normal to the area. If the question implies this angle is 60°, then: Area A = πr² = π(1)² = π m². Flux Φ = BAcos(θ) = (2 T)(π m²)cos(60°) = (2π)(0.5) = π Wb. 117 / 171 If the angular velocity (speed of rotation) of an AC generator's coil is doubled, what happens to the peak voltage and the frequency of the output? Peak voltage is doubled, frequency is doubled. Peak voltage is halved, frequency is doubled. Peak voltage is unchanged, frequency is doubled. Peak voltage is doubled, frequency is unchanged. The peak voltage (ε₀ = NBAω) is directly proportional to ω. The frequency (f = ω/2π) is also directly proportional to ω. Therefore, doubling the speed of rotation doubles both the peak voltage and the frequency. 118 / 171 Lenz's Law is used to determine the direction of the induced current in a conductor. It states that the induced current will flow in a direction that: Creates a magnetic field that opposes the change in magnetic flux. Is parallel to the original magnetic field. Maximizes the flow of charge. Assists the change in magnetic flux. The core principle of Lenz's Law is the principle of opposition. The induced current generates its own magnetic field to counteract the very change in flux that created it. If it assisted the change, it would lead to a runaway effect, violating the conservation of energy. 119 / 171 In a practical generator, the magnetic field is often produced by electromagnets rather than permanent magnets. These electromagnets are referred to as: The brushes. The slip rings. The field coils or field windings. The armature. The "field" refers to the magnetic field. The coils used to generate this magnetic field are called the field coils. 120 / 171 Flux leakage is a type of energy loss in a real transformer. It refers to: The humming sound made by the transformer. Magnetic flux from the primary coil that does not pass through the secondary coil. The escape of electrons from the windings. The leakage of cooling oil from the transformer case. In a real transformer, not all of the magnetic field lines created by the primary will be guided through the core to the secondary. Some will "leak" into the surrounding air. This represents a loss of energy transfer and reduces the efficiency of the transformer. 121 / 171 Eddy currents in the core of a transformer cause energy loss through heating. How is this loss minimized in practice? By constructing the core from thin, insulated sheets (laminations). By using thicker copper wire for the windings. By using a solid block of soft iron for the core. By immersing the transformer in oil. The thin layers of insulation between the metal sheets break up the paths for large eddy currents, effectively increasing the resistance of the core to these unwanted currents and significantly reducing heat loss. 122 / 171 Hysteresis loss is caused by the energy required to repeatedly magnetize and demagnetize the core. This is reduced by: Using a hard magnetic material like steel. Using a magnetically "soft" material like soft iron. Using a laminated core. Increasing the frequency of the AC supply. Soft iron has a thin hysteresis loop, which means very little energy is wasted as heat each time the magnetic domains are re-aligned by the changing magnetic field. 123 / 171 The law of electromagnetic induction, which forms the basis for electric generators and transformers, was discovered by: James Clerk Maxwell Georg Ohm André-Marie Ampère Michael Faraday Michael Faraday discovered the principle of electromagnetic induction in 1831 through his experiments showing that a changing magnetic field could induce an electric current. 124 / 171 A transformer has 200 turns on the primary coil and 800 turns on the secondary. If the primary is connected to a 120 V AC source, what is the voltage in the secondary coil? 30 V 480 V 120 V 960 V Using the transformer equation: Vs = Vp * (Ns / Np). Vs = 120 V * (800 / 200) = 120 V * 4 = 480 V. 125 / 171 For an EMF to be induced in a secondary coil due to a primary coil, what condition must be met? The two coils must be physically touching. Both coils must be identical. The magnetic flux produced by the primary coil must be changing. A very high DC current must flow in the primary coil. Just like with Faraday's Law and self-induction, mutual induction relies on a change in magnetic flux. A steady, unchanging current in the primary coil produces a constant magnetic flux, which will not induce any EMF in the secondary coil. 126 / 171 For long-distance electrical power transmission, power is sent at very high voltages. Why? To decrease the current for the same amount of power, minimizing I²R losses in the wires. To increase the current for the same amount of power, reducing resistance. High voltage is safer for the public. Because power plants can only generate high voltages. Power loss in transmission lines is given by P_loss = I²R. Since Power = VI, for a given amount of power, a very high voltage (V) results in a very low current (I). This low current dramatically reduces the power lost as heat in the transmission cables. 127 / 171 According to Faraday's Law, the rate of change of magnetic flux (ΔΦ/Δt) is equal to the induced EMF. What is the SI unit for this rate of change? Farad (F) Weber per second (Wb/s) Tesla per meter (T/m) Weber (Wb) Since EMF (ε) is measured in Volts, and ε = -ΔΦ/Δt, it follows that 1 Volt is equivalent to 1 Weber per second. This unit represents how quickly the magnetic flux is changing. 128 / 171 For an ideal transformer, what is the relationship between the primary voltage (Vp), secondary voltage (Vs), primary turns (Np), and secondary turns (Ns)? Vp + Np = Vs + Ns Vp / Np = Vs / Ns Vp / Vs = Ns / Np Vp * Np = Vs * Ns This formula shows that the voltage per turn is the same in both the primary and secondary coils of an ideal transformer. It can also be written as Vp/Vs = Np/Ns. 129 / 171 What is the primary purpose of an isolation transformer, which has a turns ratio of 1:1 (Np = Ns)? To double the voltage. To change the frequency of the AC. To electrically separate the output circuit from the input circuit for safety. To increase the current. An isolation transformer provides the same output voltage as the input, but there is no direct electrical connection between the two circuits. This prevents a person touching the output circuit from forming a path to ground through the main power line, significantly improving safety. 130 / 171 A circular loop of wire is in a uniform magnetic field pointing into the page. The strength of the field is suddenly decreased. According to Lenz's Law, the induced current will flow: Counter-clockwise, to create a field pointing out of the page. Clockwise, to create a field pointing out of the page. Counter-clockwise, to create a field pointing into the page. Clockwise, to create a field pointing into the page. The initial flux is directed into the page, and this flux is decreasing. Lenz's Law dictates that the induced current must oppose this change, meaning it must try to "reinforce" the weakening field. To create a magnetic field pointing into the page, the current (according to the right-hand grip rule) must flow in a clockwise direction. 131 / 171 A straight wire is moving with velocity 'v' within a uniform magnetic field 'B'. Under which condition will the motional EMF induced across its ends be zero? When the velocity is very high. When the wire moves parallel to the field. When the wire moves perpendicular to the field. When the wire is very short. If the wire moves parallel to the magnetic field lines, the charges within the wire are also moving parallel to the field. The magnetic force on a charge is zero when its velocity is parallel to the magnetic field (since sin(0°) = 0). With no force to separate the charges, no EMF is induced. 132 / 171 Lenz's Law is a consequence of the law of conservation of: Charge Energy Momentum Mass Lenz's Law states that the direction of the induced current is such that it opposes the change in magnetic flux that produced it. This opposition ensures that energy is conserved in the process. 133 / 171 The voltage output from a simple AC generator, when plotted against time, produces what type of waveform? A square wave. A constant DC level. A sinusoidal wave (sine wave). A sawtooth wave. The induced EMF is proportional to sin(θ) or sin(ωt), where θ is the angle of the coil. As the coil rotates, this produces a smooth, periodic, and symmetrical alternating voltage that follows a sine curve. 134 / 171 The term "inductance" (L) is a measure of a coil's: Ability to store electric charge. Opposition to a change in the current flowing through it. Resistance to the flow of steady current. Total magnetic field strength. Inductance, often called electrical inertia, quantifies how much back EMF a coil will generate for a given rate of change in current. A high inductance means the coil strongly opposes changes in current. 135 / 171 In an AC induction motor, the rotor always turns slightly slower than the synchronous speed. This difference in speed is known as: Hysteresis. Slip. Back EMF. Reactance. Slip is essential for an induction motor to work. If the rotor turned at synchronous speed, there would be no change in magnetic flux relative to the rotor, no induced current, and therefore no torque. The slip creates the induction. 136 / 171 How much energy is stored in a 50 mH (0.050 H) inductor when the current flowing through it is 4.0 A? 100 J 0.40 J 0.20 J 1.0 J Use the formula E = (1/2)LI². Here, L = 0.050 H and I = 4.0 A. E = 0.5 * (0.050 H) * (4.0 A)² = 0.5 * 0.050 * 16 = 0.40 J. 137 / 171 The torque that makes the rotor spin in an AC motor is produced by the interaction between: The brushes and the commutator. The input voltage and the back EMF. The magnetic field of the stator and the magnetic field of the rotor. The capacitor and the inductor. This is the universal principle for all motors. The rotating magnetic field from the stator "drags" the magnetic field of the rotor along with it, creating a turning force or torque. 138 / 171 AC induction motors are widely used due to their ruggedness and lack of brushes. A common application would be in: Small, battery-powered toys. High-precision servo mechanisms. Automobile starter motors. Household appliances like fans, washing machines, and refrigerators. The reliability, low cost, and maintenance-free nature of AC induction motors make them ideal for common household and industrial applications that do not require precise speed control (without a VFD). 139 / 171 The quantity "Mutual Inductance (M)" is a measure of: The opposition to current in the primary coil. The total energy stored in both coils. The resistance between the two coils. How effectively the magnetic flux from the primary coil links with the secondary coil. Mutual inductance (M) is a constant of proportionality that depends on the geometry of the two coils (their size, shape, number of turns, distance, and orientation) and the medium between them. It quantifies the "flux linkage" between the two. 140 / 171 A conductor of length 'L' moves with velocity 'v' in a magnetic field 'B'. If the angle between the velocity vector 'v' and the magnetic field vector 'B' is θ, the induced EMF is given by: ε = B L v tan(θ) ε = B L v sin(θ) ε = B L v cos(θ) ε = B L v The magnetic force on a charge is given by F = qvBsin(θ). Only the component of velocity perpendicular to the magnetic field (v sin(θ)) contributes to the charge separation and thus to the motional EMF. When v is perpendicular to B, θ = 90°, sin(90°)=1, and the formula simplifies to ε = BLv. 141 / 171 A coil has an inductance of one Henry (1 H) if a current changing at a rate of one ampere per second induces an EMF of: One ampere (1 A) One ohm (1 Ω) One coulomb (1 C) One volt (1 V) From the formula ε = -L(ΔI/Δt), if ΔI/Δt = 1 A/s and the induced EMF is 1 V, then the inductance L must be 1 H. So, 1 H = 1 V·s/A. 142 / 171 A step-up transformer is a device that: Increases the frequency of AC. Decreases the frequency of AC. Decreases the voltage of AC. Increases the voltage of AC. A step-up transformer has more turns in the secondary coil than in the primary coil, resulting in a higher output voltage. Transformers work on the principle of mutual induction. 143 / 171 An ideal step-down transformer is connected to a 240 V source and draws 1 A of current. If the secondary voltage is 12 V, what is the current delivered by the secondary coil? 1 A 20 A 0.05 A 2880 A First, find the input power: Pin = Vp * Ip = 240 V * 1 A = 240 W. For an ideal transformer, Pout = Pin = 240 W. Now find the secondary current: Is = Pout / Vs = 240 W / 12 V = 20 A. 144 / 171 A flat loop of area 'A' is placed in a uniform magnetic field 'B'. The angle between the magnetic field and the normal (perpendicular) to the plane of the loop is 'θ'. What is the magnetic flux (Φ) through the loop? Φ = BA sin(θ) Φ = BA cos(θ) Φ = BA Φ = B/A Magnetic flux is calculated as the product of the magnetic field component perpendicular to the area. This component is given by B cos(θ), so the total flux is BA cos(θ). 145 / 171 The property of a coil by which a counter-EMF is induced in it when the current through the coil changes is known as: Resistance Self-Inductance Capacitance Mutual Inductance Self-inductance is the phenomenon where a changing current in a coil induces an EMF in the coil itself, which opposes the change in current. 146 / 171 In a step-up transformer, which is designed to increase voltage, the secondary coil must have: More turns than the primary coil. Fewer turns than the primary coil. A much larger resistance than the primary coil. The same number of turns as the primary coil. The ratio of voltages in an ideal transformer is equal to the ratio of the number of turns (V₂/V₁ = N₂/N₁). To make V₂ larger than V₁, the number of turns in the secondary (N₂) must be greater than the number of turns in the primary (N₁). 147 / 171 A conducting rod is being pulled at a constant velocity 'v' on rails, forming a circuit in a magnetic field. An induced current 'I' flows. Why is an external force required to maintain this constant velocity? The magnetic field exerts a drag force on the induced current, opposing the motion. To overcome the force of gravity. The rails have too much friction. To overcome air resistance. Once the motional EMF induces a current 'I' in the rod, that current is flowing through a magnetic field. This results in a magnetic force on the rod itself (F = ILB), which, according to Lenz's law, always opposes the initial motion. To keep the velocity constant, an external pulling force equal in magnitude to this magnetic drag force must be applied. 148 / 171 What is the fundamental source of an induced EMF? A constant electric field. A work done by a non-conservative electric field. The potential difference of a battery. The flow of electrons in a conductor. A changing magnetic field creates a non-conservative electric field (one that forms closed loops). This electric field does work on the charges in a conductor, and the work done per unit charge is the induced EMF. 149 / 171 An airplane with a wingspan of 30 meters flies at a speed of 250 m/s in a region where the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field is 5.0 x 10⁻⁵ T. What is the motional EMF induced between its wingtips? 0.375 V 3.75 V 37.5 V 0.0 V Using the formula ε = BLv, where L is the wingspan, B is the vertical component of the magnetic field, and v is the speed. ε = (5.0 x 10⁻⁵ T) * (30 m) * (250 m/s) = 0.375 V. 150 / 171 When an AC generator delivers current to a load, a torque is created that opposes the rotation of the coil. This effect is a consequence of: Air resistance on the coil. The motor effect (Lenz's Law). The generator's inefficiency. Ohm's Law. The induced current flowing through the coil's wires (which are in a magnetic field) creates a force (F=ILB). This force produces a counter-torque that opposes the mechanical input. This is why more mechanical power is needed to turn the generator when it is supplying more electrical current. 151 / 171 What are eddy currents? The steady flow of DC current in a large metal block. Currents that are created by static electricity. Loops of electric current induced within the bulk of a conductor by a changing magnetic flux. Currents that flow only on the surface of a conductor. Eddy currents are not confined to a specific wire path; they are circulatory currents that arise within the body of a conductive material itself whenever it is subjected to a changing magnetic field, as per Faraday's Law of Induction. 152 / 171 What is the specific function of the slip rings in an AC generator? To reverse the direction of the current every half rotation. To increase the voltage produced by the generator. To rectify the AC output into DC. To maintain a continuous electrical connection with the rotating coil without twisting the wires. Each end of the coil is connected to a separate, complete ring. This arrangement ensures that the current flows out to the external circuit in the same alternating manner as it is induced in the coil, preserving the AC nature of the output. 153 / 171 An inductor used in a circuit to block high-frequency AC while allowing DC or low-frequency AC to pass is often called a: Capacitor Choke Diode Resistor The opposition (reactance) of an inductor is proportional to frequency (X_L = 2πfL). It offers very little opposition to DC (f=0) but a large opposition to high-frequency AC, effectively "choking off" the high frequencies. 154 / 171 How does an induction cooktop heat a pan? It uses a standard heating element that glows red. It generates a high-frequency magnetic field that induces eddy currents directly in the base of the metallic pot or pan. It uses hot air jets to heat the pan. It sends microwaves into the pan, similar to a microwave oven. A coil under the ceramic surface creates the changing magnetic field. This field induces eddy currents only in the ferromagnetic cookware placed on top. The pan itself becomes the source of heat, making the process very efficient and keeping the cooktop surface relatively cool. 155 / 171 To increase the magnitude of the EMF induced in a coil, one can: Decrease the speed of rotation of the coil. Decrease the number of turns in the coil. Use a weaker magnet. Increase the rate at which the magnetic flux changes. According to Faraday's Law (ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt)), the induced EMF is proportional to the number of turns (N) and the rate of change of flux (ΔΦ/Δt). Increasing this rate (e.g., by spinning the coil faster) increases the EMF. 156 / 171 What is the fundamental reason a "motional EMF" is induced in a conductor moving through a magnetic field? The conductor heats up, causing charges to move. The magnetic field induces a gravitational pull on the electrons. The magnetic force (Lorentz force) acts on the free charge carriers inside the conductor, separating them. The conductor's resistance changes due to motion. When the conductor moves through a magnetic field, the free electrons within it also move. The magnetic field exerts a force (F = qvB) on these moving charges, pushing them towards one end of the conductor. This separation of positive and negative charges creates an electric field and a potential difference, which is the motional EMF. 157 / 171 The negative sign in the formula for Faraday's Law of Induction, ε = -N(ΔΦ/Δt), is a representation of which law? Lenz's Law Ohm's Law Ampere's Law Gauss's Law Lenz's Law determines the direction of the induced current. The negative sign signifies that the induced EMF creates a current whose magnetic field opposes the original change in magnetic flux, conserving energy. 158 / 171 The synchronous speed (Ns) in revolutions per minute (RPM) is determined by the supply frequency (f) and the number of poles (P) using the formula: Ns = f * P Ns = 120P / f Ns = 60f / P Ns = 120f / P This standard formula relates the AC frequency (in Hz) and the number of magnetic poles in the stator winding to the speed of the rotating magnetic field in RPM. The factor of 120 comes from 60 seconds/minute and a factor of 2 relating cycles to pole pairs. 159 / 171 Is it possible to induce an EMF in a stationary conducting loop without moving it or moving a magnet near it? Yes, by placing the loop in an alternating magnetic field. Yes, by changing the resistance of the loop. No, motion is always required. No, it violates the laws of physics. Faraday's Law requires a change in flux, not necessarily motion. An alternating magnetic field (like one produced by an AC electromagnet) changes its strength and/or direction over time. This changing B-field creates a changing flux (ΔΦ/Δt) through the stationary loop, inducing an EMF. This is the principle of a transformer. 160 / 171 If you have a variable frequency drive (VFD) controlling an AC motor, what happens to the motor's speed if you increase the frequency of the AC supply? The motor stops running. The speed remains the same, but the torque increases. The speed decreases. The speed increases. Since synchronous speed (Ns = 120f / P) is directly proportional to the frequency (f), increasing the frequency will increase the speed of the rotating magnetic field and thus the speed of the rotor. This is the primary method for controlling the speed of AC motors. 161 / 171 Two circular coils are placed side-by-side. The mutual inductance between them is maximum when their planes are: Both oriented vertically. Parallel to each other. Perpendicular to each other. At a 45° angle to each other. When the coils are parallel (and coaxial), the magnetic field lines produced by the primary pass straight through the area of the secondary, maximizing the flux linkage. If they are perpendicular, the field lines from the primary run parallel to the plane of the secondary, resulting in zero flux linkage and zero mutual inductance. 162 / 171 Which of the following devices does NOT operate on the principle of electromagnetic induction? A simple resistor in a DC circuit. AC Generator Electric Motor Transformer Electric motors, AC generators, and transformers all rely on the principles of electromagnetic induction to function. A simple resistor in a DC circuit operates based on Ohm's law, where the current is steady and there is no changing magnetic flux. 163 / 171 What is the key difference between mutual induction and self-induction? Mutual induction stores energy, while self-induction does not. Mutual induction involves AC, while self-induction involves DC. Mutual induction involves two coils, while self-induction involves a single coil. Mutual induction is measured in Teslas, while self-induction is measured in Henries. This is the most fundamental distinction. Self-induction is an EMF induced in a coil by a change of current in itself. Mutual induction is an EMF induced in a coil by a change of current in another coil. 164 / 171 A closed conducting loop has a resistance of 5 Ω. The magnetic flux through it changes, inducing an EMF of 2 V. If the loop is replaced by one with a resistance of 10 Ω but is otherwise identical, what happens to the induced EMF? The induced EMF becomes 4 V. The induced EMF becomes 0 V. The induced EMF becomes 1 V. The induced EMF remains 2 V. Faraday's Law (ε = -NΔΦ/Δt) states that the induced EMF depends only on the number of turns and the rate of change of flux. It is independent of the loop's resistance. While the induced current (I = ε/R) would be halved, the induced EMF remains the same. 165 / 171 An autotransformer is a special type of transformer characterized by: Using only one winding which acts as both the primary and secondary. Having no iron core. Being 100% efficient. Operating only on DC. An autotransformer uses a single, tapped winding. The input voltage is applied across the whole winding, and the output voltage is taken from a "tap" point along its length (or vice versa), allowing it to step voltage up or down without a separate secondary coil. 166 / 171 In a rotating coil AC generator, the induced EMF reaches its maximum value when the plane of the coil is: Perpendicular to the magnetic field. Parallel to the magnetic field. Completely outside the magnetic field. At a 45° angle to the magnetic field. When the coil is parallel to the magnetic field, its sides are moving perpendicular to the field lines, cutting them at the fastest rate. This results in the maximum rate of change of flux (ΔΦ/Δt) and therefore the maximum induced EMF. 167 / 171 If an ideal transformer steps up the voltage, what does it do to the current? It also steps up the current. It converts the current to DC. It steps down the current. It has no effect on the current. Since power is conserved (P = VI) in an ideal transformer, if the voltage (V) is increased, the current (I) must decrease proportionally to keep the power constant. 168 / 171 What is the primary energy conversion that takes place in an AC generator? Electrical energy to mechanical energy. Mechanical energy to electrical energy. Heat energy to mechanical energy. Chemical energy to electrical energy. An external source (like a turbine powered by steam, water, or wind) provides the mechanical energy to rotate the coil. The generator then converts this rotational energy into electrical energy. 169 / 171 The instantaneous EMF (ε) at any time (t) in an AC generator is given by the formula: ε = ε₀ cos(ωt) ε = ε₀ tan(ωt) ε = ε₀ / sin(ωt) ε = ε₀ sin(ωt) This formula describes the sinusoidal nature of the output, where ε₀ is the peak (maximum) EMF and ωt is the angle of the coil at time t. The value of ε varies between +ε₀ and -ε₀. (Note: cos(ωt) is also valid if you start timing from a different coil position). 170 / 171 The induced EMF in the coil of an AC generator is momentarily zero when the plane of the coil is: Accelerating. Perpendicular to the magnetic field. At a 45° angle to the magnetic field. Parallel to the magnetic field. When the coil is perpendicular to the field, its sides are momentarily moving parallel to the field lines. They are not "cutting" any flux lines at this instant, so the rate of change of flux is zero, and the induced EMF is zero. 171 / 171 In an AC generator, a coil rotates at a constant speed in a uniform magnetic field. The induced EMF is: Always constant. Maximum when the plane of the coil is perpendicular to the magnetic field. Maximum when the plane of the coil is parallel to the magnetic field. Zero at all times. The rate of change of flux is greatest when the coil cuts through the magnetic field lines most rapidly. This occurs when the plane of the coil is parallel to the field, and its sides are moving perpendicular to the field lines. At this point, the flux itself is zero, but its rate of change is maximum. Your score is LinkedIn Facebook Twitter VKontakte 0% Restart quiz