Physics, asked by ElegantMermaid, 7 months ago

1. What do you understand by 1 MW (MegaWatt) of energy??
2. Why are magnetic field lines converging and diverging??


Please answer this question as fast as you can.....

Answers

Answered by lovepreetkaur26
1

Answer:

1. A megawatt is unit for measuring the power that is equivalent to one Millon Watts . when 1 megawatt will be used for 1 hour it will have 1000 units .

2. magnetic fields lines only exicts as loops , they cannot diverge from or converge to a point like a electric field lines can (see Gauss law for magnetism) ... However the volume outside the solenoid is much greater than the volume inside, so the density of magnetic fields lines outside is greatly reduced

I hope it will help u

Answered by intelligent12394
0

Explanation:

1.One megawatt (MW) = 1,000 kilowatts = 1,000,000 watts. A 1 MW solar power plant means the power plant is capable of supplying 1 MW per hour in proper sunlight. ... Watt-hours are a measurement of energy, describing the total amount of electricity used / produced over time.

2.When a current passes through it, it creates a nearly uniform magnetic field inside or along the axis of the solenoid. Outside the coil or solenoid, that is, at the ends and beyond the magnetic field is small and appears to diverge. This divergence is because the distance from the current carrying solenoid increases.

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