Current induced in a coil from inside

AI Thread Summary
When protons pass through a coil of wire, they induce a current in the loops of the coil. The current induced in a single loop is equal to the total current in the coil, as the voltage across multiple loops adds up rather than the current. If the coil is shorted or made superconducting, increasing the number of loops results in less current, as the induced current only needs to counteract the change in the magnetic field created by the protons. Thus, the total current does not scale with the number of loops. The relationship between induced current and loops is primarily influenced by voltage rather than a direct multiplication of current.
Northprairieman
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Hi there,

If you have a stream of protons passing through the inside of a coil of wire (coils of wire at 45 degrees to current of protons) and say the current of protons induced a certain current in one of the loops, would the current induced in one loop be equal to the current in the entire coil? Or would you times the current induced in one loop by the number of coils to get the total current induced in the coil?
 
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So does your current create a change in magnetic flux .
 
Yes, the inner current creates a change in magnetic flux in the loops. I have already calculated that. I found the current that should be created in one loop, I was just wondering if you could multiply that by the number of loops to get the total current induced in the coil, or whether the total current induced in the coil is just equal to the current induced in one loop.
 
Northprairieman said:
Yes, the inner current creates a change in magnetic flux in the loops. I have already calculated that. I found the current that should be created in one loop, I was just wondering if you could multiply that by the number of loops to get the total current induced in the coil, or whether the total current induced in the coil is just equal to the current induced in one loop.

The current in the coil is equal to the current in a single loop. It's the voltage across the loops that will add.

If you short out the coil or use a superconducting coil, then LESS current will go through the coil if there are more loops, because the amount of current will be just big enough to counteract the change in magnetic field from the protons, and you don't need less current to produce the same magnetic field.
 
Thanks
 
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