Cheman said:
Does it require energy to create a magnetic field? etc? Thanks. :)
Yes, indeed, it requires energy.
Magnetic fields go hand in hand with current flow: a magnetic field doesn't exist by itself. The magnetic field is a phenomenon that arises along with current flow. If the magnetic field is your goal, you must first make current flow, and, of course, it requires energy to create a current.
Whenever there is current flowing, there is also a magnetic field. In many cases that field is ignored. There is a magnetic field around the wires that lead the power into your computer, for example. In this situation, that magnetic field is ignored because the current is what is desired.
In the transformer the magnetic aspect of the current flow suddenly becomes very important. It can be used to change the voltage and amperage by induction for use in different auxiliary circuits.
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I don't know what you mean when you say "prove the equation". Those equations are descriptions of what happens.
They are, in a sence, instructions for how to transform voltage and current. If you need 15 volts to operate a given circuit, and you are starting with 110 volts from the wall socket they tell you the ratio of the number of turns to make in the primary and secondary.
We can do this as a ratio. Let us say your primary coil has 400 turns.
110 is to 400 as 15 is to ?
or 110:400 :: 15:?
The product of the means equals the product of the extremes:
We have the means: 400 and 15. Multiply. You get 6000. Divide this by 110. You get 54.54.
To get 15 volts out of you secondary you will put 54.54 turns of wire on it. (round it off to 54 or 55).
The only "proof" of this I can think of, is for you to actually make a transformer according to these instructions.