What Is the Unit of Inductance (Henry) & How Does It Work?

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SUMMARY

The unit of inductance, known as the henry (H), quantifies the time required for current to fully establish itself in an inductor. It is defined as the ratio of the rate of change of current to the voltage across the inductor, where one henry corresponds to a voltage of one volt with a current change of one ampere per second. Inductance influences the rate of current change; higher inductance results in slower current changes. Additionally, the inductance can be affected by factors such as the number of turns in the coil and the presence of a magnetic core.

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Mr_Bojingles
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I read that the unit of inductance is the measure of the time it takes for a current to fully establish itself through the inductor.

When a battery is connected across a wire-coil inductor (or any kind of inductor), it
takes a while for the current flow to establish itself throughout the inductor. The current
changes at a rate that depends on the inductance: the greater the inductance, the
slower the rate of change of current for a given battery voltage.
The unit of inductance is an expression of the ratio between the rate of current
change and the voltage across an inductor. An inductance of one henry, abbreviated H,
represents a potential difference of one volt across an inductor within which the current
is increasing or decreasing at one ampere per second.

Is the reason it takes longer in some inductors for the current to establish itself because it creates a greater magnetic flux? Can the henry also tell you the intensity of the magnetic field produced in an inductor? Obviously a coil with 10 turns is going to have a greater magnetic flux than one with 5 turns. If I took the iron core out of the 10 turn coil would the current flow faster because there would be less back EMF? Is that the idea behind it? Wouldn't it be easier to measure an inductors inductance by measuring the magnetic flux created when current flows through it?

Have I got the right idea of the henry or am I mixing something up?
 
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You have the basic ideas correct. And the L value is generally easiest to measure by putting an AC voltage across the inductor, and measuring the resulting current. Measuring the flux directly is a more difficult physical problem.
 

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