Physics, asked by safiullah9944, 7 months ago

• (a) State Lenz's Law of electromagnetic
induction.
(b) Explain how Lenz's Law illustrates the
Principle of Conservation of Energy.​

Answers

Answered by ushajosyula96
1

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a)

Lenz’s law states that the direction of the current induced in a conductor by a changing magnetic field is such that the magnetic field created by the induced current opposes the initial changing magnetic field which produced it.

Lenz’s Law is named after the German scientist H. F. E. Lenz in 1834. Lenz’s law obeys Newton’s third law of motion (i.e to every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction) and the conservation of energy (i.e energy may neither be created nor destroyed and therefore the sum of all the energies in the system is a constant).

b)

Lenz's Law states that, when you induce a current in a wire via a changing magnetic field, the current flows through the wire in such a direction so that its magnetic field opposes the change that produced the current.

So, what happens when you induce a current by, say, moving a wire through a magnetic field, is that you're converting mechanical energy (the energy of the wire's motion) into electrical energy (the energy carried by the induced current).

Lenz's Law ensures that the mechanical energy of the wire is reduced by the same amount of energy gained by the current. It does this by exerting a force on the wire opposing the wire's motion. This causes the wire to lose mechanical energy (its motion is impeded); it must do work against the induced magnetic field to generate current.

To make this a little more concrete, let's imagine a fictitious universe where Lenz's Law doesn't apply; i.e. a universe in which there's no force generated on the wire at all, despite the induced current.

In this fictitious universe, imagine that you give the wire one unit of mechanical energy. As the wire passes through a magnetic field, a current appears in the wire that also carries one unit of energy. But since no opposing force is generated, no mechanical energy is lost; the wire still has its original one unit of mechanical energy. Which means that the wire now has two units of total energy (one electrical; one mechanical). You've created energy from nothing!

Answered by harshdubey00001
0

Answer:

Lenz's law, in electromagnetism, statement that an induced electric current flows in a direction such that the current opposes the change that induced it. This law was deduced in 1834 by the Russian physicist Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz (1804–65).

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