PhiowPhi said:
Lately I don't trust my gut feelings as much because it's wrong... and therefore need to review!
That's good. You have to work it in your head until your intuition takes you to the formulas. When your intuition and the math agree you are getting someplace.
The mind can believe most anything so we must lead it to truth by checking and cross-checking our logic.
PhiowPhi said:
Is this correct? Based on where the wires are connected, and that's the only path the right most charge could move, and the middle and the left most charge just has to go up.
Your new drawing has both yellow end wires oriented so that the force on charges is now upward. A current could flow if the loop is completed outside the magnetic field where its vertical part doesn't induce an opposing voltage..
PhiowPhi said:
Also, another way I'm imagining this is to think of EMF as pressure and current as water. An old analogy, but really useful
Water analogies can be very useful. But one must be wary of a couple thought traps they can lead you to:
We pump water out of the ground, and water that's not contained will fall to the ground and seep in. This causes people to mistakenly think that "ground" has some magical attraction for electric current. In reality "ground" is just another wire that goes most everywhere.
We use a garden hose to transport water molecules from point A to point B. If your garden hose is full there's very little delay between opening the spigot and getting water out the far end. This causes people to mistakenly think that electrons move down a wire at near the speed of light, which they don't. They drift along slower than an ant's pace. A voltage change however propagates down the wire near speed of light, but that's just the charges bumping into one another.
A better analogy is a hydraulic power system.
A hydraulic power system is used to transport energy from point A to point B. Fluid is pumped into a hose at high pressure, and at far end of hose fluid is forced out by the fluid behind it to do work. The fluid moves slowly along the hydraulic hose, but a pressure change propagates down it at speed of sound.
When you push a few molecules of fluid in one end of the hose a similar number of molecules pop out the far end but they're not the same molecules .
When you push an electron's worth of charge into one end of a wire a similar electron's worth will pop out the far end, but it's not the same electron.
Our good friend SophieCentaur caused me to rethink the water analogy and I've added the above caveats to my use of it. He comes down on the concept of "electrons whizzing around a circuit at light speed", and rightly so..
In electric circuits we're usually more interested in transporting energy than in transporting charge.
So be rigorous in your use of water analogy and keep Pascal's principle in mind--You transmit
energy through the fluid.
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/pasc.html
Have fun and good luck in your studies. old jim