View Full Version : Electromagnetic fields+voltage=hard homework
Emmsey Square
Dec21-03, 09:01 PM
Alright, I'm doing a project where I'm supposed to make an electromagnet, and then figure out how the voltage affects both the magnitude and the power of the electromagnetic field. Can anyone give me some good equations to use, or something?
how the voltage affects both the magnitude and the power of the electromagnetic field
Magnetic field strength is given by
F = ILB
The obvious answer is that the more voltage you have, the higher the current in the line will be.
Chi Meson
Dec22-03, 01:02 PM
Originally posted by Emmsey Square
Alright, I'm doing a project where I'm supposed to make an electromagnet, and then figure out how the voltage affects both the magnitude and the power of the electromagnetic field. Can anyone give me some good equations to use, or something?
Is the question just about the strength of the magnetic field (magnitude), or is there a second thing? The "power" of a magnetic field doesn't make any sense.
THere would be the power dissipated in the coil of wire while it created the magnetic field: P=IV and V = IR put together give you P = (V^2)/R where R is the resistance in the wire.
Well, Voltage=CurrentxResistance. So, the more voltage you have, the more current there is. And the more current you have, the more "power" your magnetic field has.
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