Physics, asked by montikansal7984, 1 year ago

A time varying electric field produces a magnetic field'. This phenomenon is called: hertz's law ampere maxwell's law faraday's law kirchoff s law

Answers

Answered by shanaya9249
0
According to Faraday's law of induction, there is an induced emf which is equal to the rate of change ofmagnetic flux. Since emf between two points is the work done per unit charge to take it from one point to the other, its existence simply implies the existence of an electric field.
Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Ampere-Maxwell Law

Explanation:

The Ampere-Maxwell equation relates the electric currents and the magnetic flux. It describes the magnetic fields which result from a transmitter wire or from a loop in the electromagnetic surveys. For steady currents, it is the key for describing the magnetometric resistivity experiment.

The maxwell's equations are a set of four equations namely the Gauss law and Faraday's law that describe as to how the electric charges and electric currents create electric and magnetic fields. Thus, the time varying electric phenomena is known as the Ampere-Maxwell effect.

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