Lenz's Law and conservation of energy.

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on Lenz's Law and its relationship to the conservation of energy, particularly in the context of induced currents and magnetic fields. Participants explore the mechanisms of how current is generated in a solenoid and the timing of various electromagnetic phenomena.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions whether the current that produces the electromagnet or the poles of the electromagnet that cause work done comes first.
  • Another participant explains that a solenoid without current has no magnetic field and that a changing current induces an electromotive force (emf) according to Lenz's Law.
  • Some participants express confusion about how induced current forms and whether the solenoid must have poles first.
  • It is noted that Lenz's Law requires the induced current to oppose the change in magnetic flux, not necessarily that the field has poles.
  • Participants discuss the conservation of energy and how energy stored in magnetic fields is related to the current generated.
  • There is mention of the simultaneous nature of current generation, pole formation, and magnetization of the coil as they all occur together during a change in flux.
  • Inductance is introduced as a concept that relates to the timing of current changes in inductors, with references to Faraday's Law and its implications.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express uncertainty about the sequence of events in electromagnetic phenomena, with some suggesting that all elements occur simultaneously. There is no consensus on the initial conditions for current generation or the necessity of magnetic poles.

Contextual Notes

Participants discuss the relationship between induced currents, magnetic fields, and energy conservation without resolving the complexities of these interactions. The discussion includes references to inductance and Faraday's Law, indicating a need for further exploration of these concepts.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for individuals interested in electromagnetism, particularly those exploring the principles of Lenz's Law, induced currents, and the role of inductance in electrical circuits.

JadenErius
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Hello everyone, first time posting in here.
Heres a question, in Lenz's Law, it states that the current produced will be opposite of the motion that created it. This is done by the repulsion or attraction force created by the solenoid to counter the motion of the magnet. Now, without the work done created by the solenoid's counter poles to the magnet's motion and it overcoming it, there can be no current due to the conservation of energy. But without a current how does the solenoid form an electromagnet with the poles to counter the magnet's motion.

Hence which one came first, the current that produces the electromagnet, or the poles of the electromagnet that causes work done thereby creating current.
 
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Well, a solenoid w/o current has no H field. A current is accompanied by an H field. As the current changes from zero to non-zero, the magnetic flux, phi, changes as well. An emf accompanies the original current, and the time changing flux includes a counter emf, which acts in an opposite direction to the original, per Lenz' law. Make sense?

Claude
 
well i mean induced current, how does it form? I know change in magnetic flux, but how would the current come out of nowhere. Meaning, shouldn't the solenoid or coil of wire have to have poles first?
 
JadenErius said:
Meaning, shouldn't the solenoid or coil of wire have to have poles first?
No, that is not necessary. In fact, some magnetic fields do not have what could be described as "poles" anyway. An example is the magnetic field around a long straight wire which goes around in a loop without ever "concentrating" into a dipole field.

Lenz's law only requires that the induced current oppose the change in magnetic flux, not that the field have poles.
 
ok but how does the conservation of energy apply? Where does the current come from? I know from movement but how is that energy converted into electrical energy
 
It is important to understand that the fields themselves have energy. Roughly speaking, by generating a field which opposes the field you are reducing the energy stored in the field. This energy is then available to the current to do work.
 
but how do u generate the field that opposes the field?
 
but how is the current generated without the magnetic field ? o.O:confused:
 
  • #10
Hence which one came first, the current that produces the electromagnet, or the poles of the electromagnet that causes work done thereby creating current.

Neither, they grow together.

If you switch on/off a supply to a pure conductor or resistor the current increases/decreases almost instantaneously to its maximum value.

If you do this to a component with inductance the current takes measurable time to reach its final value.

Your components have inductance and exhibit this behaviour.

The physics behind Lenz law is the reason that current in an inductor cannot change instanteously. Faradays law, which incorporates Lenz law, provides a mathematical statement for calculation purposes.

Have you come across inductance and Faraday's law yet?
 
  • #11
JadenErius said:
but how is the current generated without the magnetic field ? o.O:confused:
By the induced E-field
\nabla \times \mathbf{E} = -\frac{\partial \mathbf{B}} {\partial t}
and by Ohm's law
\mathbf{E} = \frac{1}{\sigma} \mathbf{J}
 
  • #12
JadenErius, looking at Studiot's response I realize that I may have been answering the wrong question. Is your question one of timing of the various elements of electromagnetics? If so, the answer is clear: they all happen at the same time.

Just like in Newton's 2nd law, F=ma, the force does not happen first and then the acceleration, but rather they are always found together. If you were to find a situation where there was a force coming first without an acceleration yet then the law would be violated. Similarly with Maxwell's equations.
 
  • #13
Hmmm makes sense and I have encountered faraday's law but not inductance though. But if my understanding of what your saying is that the current, the formation of the poles and the magnetizing of the coil of wire happens at the same time?
An explanation in inductance would be good though
 
  • #14
JadenErius said:
But if my understanding of what your saying is that the current, the formation of the poles and the magnetizing of the coil of wire happens at the same time?
Yes. All of that happens at the same time that the flux changes in the loop.
 
  • #15
What is inductance then, does it affect this topic?
 
  • #16
bump hello?
 
  • #17
JadenErius said:
What is inductance then, does it affect this topic?
As far as what inductance is, here is the Wikipedia page on inductance:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductance

Inductors store energy in a magnetic field, and the sign of the voltage across an inductor is determined by Lenz's law, so yes they are related.
 
  • #18
interesting, i think i get it to a certain level. Thanks a bunch guys
 

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