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Introductory Physics Homework Help
Can't understand why the unit of Reluctance is At/Wb
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[QUOTE="road2knowledge, post: 5465737, member: 593201"] [h2]Homework Statement [/h2] I can't figure out why the unit of Reluctance is At/Wb and not (At/Wb)m[SUP]2[/SUP] This is what I have from my textbook, with the red oval area being the part that I'm totally confused about [ATTACH=full]100338[/ATTACH] [h2]Homework Equations[/h2][h2]The Attempt at a Solution[/h2] So the m/m cancels out to 1 making it R=1/(Wb/At·m[SUP]2[/SUP]) which is = (At·m[SUP]2[/SUP])/Wb then I have no idea what happened so that m[SUP]2[/SUP] vanished and R became At/Wb Please help me clear up my confusion I can't sleep scratching my head T_T Thanks a bunch! [/QUOTE]
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Introductory Physics Homework Help
Can't understand why the unit of Reluctance is At/Wb
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