hmmm let's try this approach
i usually start from a mechanistic description of what's happening and figure out the formula instead of starting with a formula and going the other way
@sophiecentaur implores us "do the maths" but i am a child of the lesser gods of math . So i struggle to believe formulas, have tp figure them out mechanically.
That said,
I think the trouble lies in algebra not in physics.
a Triad is a set of three related things
Force Mass and Acceleration are a triad related by simple ratio, if you know any two you know the third
same for Distance Rate and Time
so it is not necessary that all three terms of a triad appear in a formula describing some phenomenon.
and anyone term of a triad can be replaced by the other two or vice versa
for example f = ma, so a = f/m
substituting f/m for a into the familiar high school physics distance formula s= ½at
2 + v
0t gives
s= ½ ##\frac{f}{m}##t
2 + v
0t,
which might tempt the uninitiated to think distance traversed by a falling object is independent of acceleration.
Now back to your formulas
do you mind if i swap to SI to get rid of that pesky 10^
8
Steinmetz figured out that hysteresis loss per cycle is ηB
1.6
and η has value about 0.0024 if you have flux density in lines per cm
2 (Maxwells in my day) and you want ergs per cc per cycle
actually he found various η's for various materials because it's a property of the material.
We could figure a new η for SI units, maybe i will another day ..
Point is, η X flux gives us energy
entity314 said:
Given hysteresis loss = η×Bmax×f×V
i'll remove that mistaken V per your post #7
Given hysteresis loss = η×Bmax×f
SI units are
EDIT(thanks Mr Entity)
Joules per second = η X Teslas X Hertz
may i use ω instead of hz and lump the 2π in with η ? Call it n' ? (I'll probably forget to type the ' someplace

)
Hysteresis loss = η' X Bmax X ω
now to the next formula
entity314 said:
and Bmax = (V ×〖10〗^ 8)/(√2 π×f×N×A)
Bmax = (V ×〖10〗^ 8)/(√2 π×f×N×A)
That's for Gauss area in cm
2, SI uses Teslas and m
2
Bmax = V / (√2πf X N X A)
Bmax X A = V/)√2πf X N)
Now let's simplify a bit more
the √2 is there because Steinmetz used RMS volts but peak flux
so if i say we'll use peak both places i can drop the max from B and the √2 from the denominator, just to reduce the clutter
and if i say we'll use a single turn i can drop the N, or if you prefer say we're using volts per turn
B X A = V/2πf
B X A is flux Φ and 2πf is angular velocity ω
Φ = V/ω flux in Webers and volts in volts per turn
Do you agree this formula is functionally equivalent to the second one one of your post #1 ?
how about that - it's a Triad that relates flux Φ, volts per turn V , and frequency ω
Which means a formula without an explicit frequency term in it may well include frequency , it might appear as the other two terms of the triad, flux and voltage
Let me put it back in terms of B by re-introducing area, we'll need it that way in a minute
divide both sides by A,, and since B = Φ/A
B = V/Aω and we'll call that eq(1)
Webers = Volts X seconds/AreaYou substituted the second formula into the first, so let me repeat that using my decluttered versions
Hysteresis loss = η' X Bmax X ω
let me change from Bmax to B by lumping also into η a and √2 ,, call it η" now
Hysteresis loss = η" X B X ω , and we'll call that eq(2)
joules per sec = n" X Webers per second
Substituting eq1 into eq2
Hysteresis loss = η" X V/Aω X ω
so ω appears to disappear
eq(3) Hysteresis loss = η" X V/A sure enough no ω
But did ω really disappear ? Or did a Triad fool us ?
Since, from that link in post # 10
volts per hertz tells what is fux
and units are even correct, a Weber is a Volt-second
Weber = Volt X second ? then
Volt = Weber X sec
-1
it follows that a Volt is a Weber per second, which would be weber X sec-1 which is Weber X Hertz
and your formula has volts in it and volts has Hertz in it
so frequency hasn't disappeared it's just hiding in a triad !i have said often i struggle with math
so must apologize for this 'sow's ear ' of a presentation
but this is how my alleged brain plods along,
I could clean the presentation up in another evening or two
but have a lot of time in it already
and for me it'll be
way more productive to toss it out now for a 'child of the greater math gods' to show me my error, or to point me how to clean it up.
Lavoisier says 'Science is just language well arranged' and the above is my awkward first attempt Doubtless fraught with typos.
Is it plausible ?
Corrections welcome
old jim
PS of course we'll have to put Steinmetz's B exponent of 1.6 back in there
i simply forgot to type it in early and carried that omission the rest of the way