Is there a difference between Faraday’s induction experiments?

In summary: This is best understood using a full relativistic description of the electromagnetic field, as it is a relativistic field theory.A third variation is to keep the permanent magnet at rest and move the coil, which again is based on the same principles. This example led Einstein to the discovery of the fully consistent theory of electrodynamics of moving bodies, known as the special theory of relativity. In summary, Faraday's law of induction, demonstrated through the creation of a current in one wire coil resulting in a second current in a second coil, is also seen in another experiment where a magnet is moved through a wire coil. This is due to the changing magnetic flux in
  • #1
cg0303
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Faraday first demonstrated his law of induction by showing that when he created a current in one wire coil it created a second current in a second coil.

Another experiment showed the same effect. When he moved a magnet through a wire coil, it created a current in the coil.

My question is this: it seems that the two scenarios are different. The second experiment simply demonstrates Maxwell’s third law (named after Faraday) as it simply involves a moving magnet and magnetic field. However, the first experiment involves an accelerating charge, as the charges in the first coil accelerate when a current is created. Accelerating charges create electromagnetic waves, which goes beyond Faraday’s law of induction.
 
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  • #2
cg0303 said:
Faraday first demonstrated his law of induction by showing that when he created a current in one wire coil it created a second current in a second coil.

Another experiment showed the same effect. When he moved a magnet through a wire coil, it created a current in the coil.

My question is this: it seems that the two scenarios are different. The second experiment simply demonstrates Maxwell’s third law (named after Faraday) as it simply involves a moving magnet and magnetic field. However, the first experiment involves an accelerating charge, as the charges in the first coil accelerate when a current is created. Accelerating charges create electromagnetic waves, which goes beyond Faraday’s law of induction.

They are not different. The induced current in the second coil in each scenario is due the changing magnetic flux in the second coil.

Changing magnetic flux can occur by changing (i) magnetic field strength, (ii) area that the magnetic field goes through (iii) the angle that the area and the magnetic field makes.

In the first example, the current in the first coil is increasing, and thus, the magnetic field due to the current is also increasing. The second coil sees an increasing magnetic field (Case (i)). Thus, a changing flux, resulting in an induced current in the second coil.

In the second example, the moving magnet changes the magnetic field strength in the coil, because the magnetic field strength of a magnet typically depends on distance from it. So the coil sees a changing magnetic field as well when the magnet moves. So same change in flux.

They are both demonstrations of the same principle.

Zz.
 
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  • #3
Faraday's Law of induction nowadays is understood to be the Maxwell equation
$$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{E}+\frac{1}{c} \partial_t \vec{B}=0,$$
and that's the full equation, no approximations made.

The first example is not so much different from the 2nd, because there a time-dependent magnetic field is at the place of the 2nd coil because the current in the first coil implies the existence of a time-dependent magnetic field due to the Ampere-Maxwell Law
$$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{B} -\frac{1}{c} \partial_t \vec{E}=\frac{1}{c} \vec{j}.$$
Of course, you have to take all 4 Maxwell equations + the constitutive equations for the fields in a medium into account to get a complete set of dynamical equations.

The 2nd example provides a time-varying magnetic field due to the motion of the magnet but also an electric field due to this motion. That's of course best understood using a full relativistic description of the em. field (it's anyway a relativistic field theory).

A 3rd variant is to keep the permanent magnet at rest and move the coil, which again is based on the same principles. It's this example which lead Einstein to the discovery of the fully consistent theory of electrodynamics of moving bodies, which is known as the special theory of relativity.
 
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  • #4
cg0303 said:
Accelerating charges create electromagnetic waves, which goes beyond Faraday’s law of induction.
The fact that accelerating charges create electromagnetic waves is a consequence of Faraday's law of induction and Ampere's-Maxwell law (Ampere's law with the addition of displacement current term by Maxwell). So it's not something far beyond Faraday's law as you might thought at first place.
 
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  • #5
It's not beyond Faraday's Law of induction at all. Faraday's Law of induction is one of the fundmamental Maxwell equations necessary to derive the existence of em. fields!
 
  • #6
vanhees71 said:
necessary to derive the existence of em. fields
You mean necessary to derive the wave equation which the E and B field obey.
 
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  • #7
Sure, I should have written: necessary to derive the existence of em. wave solutions.
 
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  • #8
vanhees71 said:
Faraday's Law of induction nowadays is understood to be the Maxwell equation
$$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{E}+\frac{1}{c} \partial_t \vec{B}=0,$$
and that's the full equation, no approximations made.

The first example is not so much different from the 2nd, because there a time-dependent magnetic field is at the place of the 2nd coil because the current in the first coil implies the existence of a time-dependent magnetic field due to the Ampere-Maxwell Law
$$\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{B} -\frac{1}{c} \partial_t \vec{E}=\frac{1}{c} \vec{j}.$$
Of course, you have to take all 4 Maxwell equations + the constitutive equations for the fields in a medium into account to get a complete set of dynamical equations.

The 2nd example provides a time-varying magnetic field due to the motion of the magnet but also an electric field due to this motion. That's of course best understood using a full relativistic description of the em. field (it's anyway a relativistic field theory).

A 3rd variant is to keep the permanent magnet at rest and move the coil, which again is based on the same principles. It's this example which lead Einstein to the discovery of the fully consistent theory of electrodynamics of moving bodies, which is known as the special theory of relativity.
Ok. Would it be correct to say that, while both examples demonstrate the law of induction, electromagnetic waves exist only in the first?
 
  • #9
cg0303 said:
Ok. Would it be correct to say that, while both examples demonstrate the law of induction, electromagnetic waves exist only in the first?
No, electromagnetic waves are being produced by the moving magnet as well. If the magnet oscillates mechanically back and forth with frequency ##f## then it is the source of electromagnetic waves of the same frequency ##f##. Generally any motion with acceleration of the magnet produces EM waves.
 
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  • #10
Delta2 said:
No, electromagnetic waves are being produced by the moving magnet as well. If the magnet oscillates mechanically back and forth with frequency ##f## then it is the source of electromagnetic waves of the same frequency ##f##. Generally any motion with acceleration of the magnet produces EM waves.
In the second experiment, I imagined the magnet moving at a constant velocity, not moving back and forth. In that case, I'm assuming there would not be an EM wave?
 
  • #11
cg0303 said:
In the second experiment, I imagined the magnet moving at a constant velocity, not moving back and forth. In that case, I'm assuming there would not be an EM wave?
Even in this case, I think an EM wave is being produced . That is because even when the magnet is moving with constant velocity, the magnetic field around the magnet is time varying, and according to Maxwell's equations a time varying magnetic field is always accompanied by a time varying electric field and together they form an EM wave.
 
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  • #12
Delta2 said:
Even in this case, I think an EM wave is being produced . That is because even when the magnet is moving with constant velocity, the magnetic field around the magnet is time varying, and according to Maxwell's equations a time varying magnetic field is always accompanied by a time varying electric field and together they form an EM wave.
What determines the frequency of the wave in this case?
 
  • #13
cg0303 said:
What determines the frequency of the wave in this case?
Not sure, i think in this case the em wave will have a spectrum of frequencies and not a single frequency.
 
  • #14
Delta2 said:
Even in this case, I think an EM wave is being produced . That is because even when the magnet is moving with constant velocity, the magnetic field around the magnet is time varying, and according to Maxwell's equations a time varying magnetic field is always accompanied by a time varying electric field and together they form an EM wave.
Just to be clear, are you saying that an isolated magnet at constant velocity in an inertial frame produces EM waves, that propagate away from it? The waves carry energy away, so does the magnet slow down if you don't propel it?

What happens in the rest frame of the magnet? Is there radiation too? If yes, where does the energy for it come from?
 
  • #15
For a magnet at constant velocity there are no waves radiated, as is easily seen from transforming back to the rest frame of the magnet, where you have a magnetostatic field, which is not a radiation field. The field in the frame, where the magnet is moving is just the Lorentz-boosted field of the magnetostatic field.
 
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  • #16
vanhees71 said:
The field in the frame, where the magnet is moving is just the Lorentz-boosted field of the magnetostatic field.
In the frame where the magnet is moving, isn't the magnetic field time varying?
 
  • #17
Yes it is. Also the field of a uniformly moving point charge is time-dependent. There's nevertheless no radiation. It's just a boosted Coulomb field.
 
  • #18
vanhees71 said:
Yes it is. Also the field of a uniformly moving point charge is time-dependent. There's nevertheless no radiation. It's just a boosted Coulomb field
So ##\frac{\partial \mathbf{B}}{\partial t}\neq 0## but is it ##\frac{\partial \mathbf{B}}{\partial t}=constant## that's why there is no radiation?

What is a Lorentz-boosted field?
 
  • #19
@cg0303 you say these experiments are different because
cg0303 said:
it seems that the two scenarios are different. The second experiment simply demonstrates Maxwell’s third law (named after Faraday) as it simply involves a moving magnet and magnetic field. However, the first experiment involves an accelerating charge, as the charges in the first coil accelerate when a current is created.

But think about it this way , in the two coil scenario which is a transformer as it is known, does the second coil have any information about what sort of charges or what exactly is happening in the first coil? All the second coils knows is that a magnetic field is increasing and decreasing through it. Imagine you were the second coil, can you see the electrons in the first coil? No you can't. But can you experience a increase/decrease in B field? Yes you can. So you have a time varying field.

Then think of the permanent magnet and coil scenario , again imagine you are the coil, what do you see? Does it even matter what you see, you again feel/register an increase/decrease in field strength.

On the same note you can take a symmetrical permanent cylinder shaped magnet with axial polarization and rotate it around it's axis of polarization and there would be no field change.
Permanent magnet or electromagnet it doesn't matter, the effect on a nearby coil is the same as long as the permanent magnet is moved in the right way near or through the coil.Let me give another simple example. Take a transformer , probe the secondary winding , you see 50Hz sine wave, then probe a small electrical generator for a 50hz grid that has permanent magnet rotor, what do you see at the stator coils? again 50hz sine wave,

I think we could say the two scenarios are different simply in how the magnetic field was created in the source but not different from the coil's perspective as both cases involve the field lines increasing/decreasing through the coil and the coil couldn't care less what caused the field lines as long as they are changing.
 
  • #20
Delta2 said:
So ##\frac{\partial \mathbf{B}}{\partial t}\neq 0## but is it ##\frac{\partial \mathbf{B}}{\partial t}=constant## that's why there is no radiation?

What is a Lorentz-boosted field?
By definition a radiation field has parts, for which ##\vec{E} \times \vec{B}## go like ##1/r^2## for ##r \rightarrow \infty## and Lorentz-boosted static fields have no such parts, i.e., they go faster to 0 at infinity, and thus the total energy radiated out from any finite spatial region vanishes at infinity, i.e., no energy is transported far out from the sources of the fields.

For the Lorentz transformation of the em. field, see Eqs. (2.3.36) and (2.3.37) in

https://itp.uni-frankfurt.de/~hees/pf-faq/srt.pdf
 
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  • #21
vanhees71 said:
By definition a radiation field has parts, for which ##\vec{E} \times \vec{B}## go like ##1/r^2## for ##r \rightarrow \infty## and Lorentz-boosted static fields have no such parts, i.e., they go faster to 0 at infinity, and thus the total energy radiated out from any finite spatial region vanishes at infinity, i.e., no energy is transported far out from the sources of the fields.

For the Lorentz transformation of the em. field, see Eqs. (2.3.36) and (2.3.37) in

https://itp.uni-frankfurt.de/~hees/pf-faq/srt.pdf
So , something that is important for me personally, there are components of E and B such that the Poynting vector ##\mathbf{E}\times\mathbf{B}## is not zero but it falls faster than ##1/r^2## (it falls like ##1/r^4## for example for Lorentz boosted fields).

I can't seem to be able to locate Eqs (2.3.36) and (2.3.37), it stops at Eq 2.3.18.

But yes, thanks a lot for all and for this, it seems a great text for special relativity (and not only).
 
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  • #22
Sorry for my typo. I mean of course Eqs. (3.2.36) and (3.2.37) on page 53. Unfortunately the text is only in its beginnings :-(.
 
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  • #23
Delta2 said:
Even in this case, I think an EM wave is being produced . That is because even when the magnet is moving with constant velocity, the magnetic field around the magnet is time varying, and according to Maxwell's equations a time varying magnetic field is always accompanied by a time varying electric field and together they form an EM wave.
But in such a case are not the two fields in quadrature rather than in-phase as for an EM wave?
 
  • #24
Delta2 said:
No, electromagnetic waves are being produced by the moving magnet as well. If the magnet oscillates mechanically back and forth with frequency ##f## then it is the source of electromagnetic waves of the same frequency ##f##. Generally any motion with acceleration of the magnet produces EM waves.
As a magnet always contains charges, I think it is difficult to know whether it is the magnet or the charges doing the radiating.
 

1. Is Faraday's induction experiment different from other induction experiments?

Yes, Faraday's induction experiment is different from other induction experiments because it specifically refers to the experiments conducted by Michael Faraday in the 1830s to demonstrate the principle of electromagnetic induction.

2. What is the principle of Faraday's induction experiment?

The principle of Faraday's induction experiment is that a changing magnetic field can induce an electric current in a conductor.

3. How did Faraday's induction experiment contribute to the development of electricity and magnetism?

Faraday's induction experiment was a crucial step in understanding the relationship between electricity and magnetism, and it laid the foundation for the development of electromagnetic theory and the invention of electric generators and motors.

4. Can Faraday's induction experiment be replicated today?

Yes, Faraday's induction experiment can be replicated today with modern equipment and techniques. In fact, it is still a common experiment in physics classrooms to demonstrate the principles of electromagnetic induction.

5. Are there any practical applications of Faraday's induction experiment?

Yes, Faraday's induction experiment has numerous practical applications, including power generation, electric motors, transformers, and many electronic devices such as speakers, microphones, and induction cooktops.

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