Finding the Magnetic Flux of a Coil

AI Thread Summary
The magnetic flux of a coil is determined solely by the area of the coil and the strength of the magnetic field it is exposed to, particularly when oriented perpendicular to the field. The calculated flux is 6.9 × 10−4 Wb, which is derived from multiplying the area by the magnetic flux density. The number of turns in the coil does not affect the total magnetic flux, as the area remains constant regardless of the turns. Thus, even with a significantly higher number of turns, the flux remains the same at 6.9e-4 Wb. Understanding this principle clarifies why the number of turns does not factor into the calculation of magnetic flux.
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See attached problem:

http://img72.imageshack.us/img72/4791/65321158jp4.th.jpg

The answer is 6.9 × 10−4 Wb - by multiplying the Area by the magentic flux density. Mq is, why does one not multiply this by 850 (number of turns) in order to find the answer.

Thanks
 
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The flux that is coupled to the coil in dependent only on the area of the coil and the strength of the magnetic field that it is exposed to. In this case since it is oriented perpendicular to the field, all the area of the coil is exposed to the field.

It does not matter how many turns are there; the area of the coil as it "looks at the field" is still the same! Not 850, even if you had 8500000000... turns, the amount of flux cutting thru the coil is still 6.9e-4 Wb only :D
 
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