ELECTROMAGNETISM
ELECTROMAGNETISM
ELECTROMAGNETISM
Table of Contents
1
Unit 2: Electricity and Energy
Resources
MODULE 1: Magnetism and Its Uses
1.1: Magnetism
Question 1
What is the difference between a magnetic
field and a magnetic pole?
Section Check
1.1
Answer
A magnetic field is the area surrounding a
magnet that exerts a force on other magnets
and magnetic materials. A magnetic pole is
the region on a magnet where the magnetic
force is strongest.
Section Check
1.1
Question 2
How do unlike magnetic poles interact?
Answer
Two magnets can either attract or repel each
other. Like magnetic poles repel each other
and unlike poles attract each other.
Section Check
1.1
Question 3
Groups of atoms with aligned magnetic
poles are called __________.
A. magnetic charges
B. magnetic domains
C. magnetic fields
D. magnetic materials
Section Check
1.1
Answer
The answer is B, magnetic domains.
Magnetic materials contain magnetic
domains.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Electric Current and Magnetism
• The inertia of
the coil keeps it
rotating.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 3. The commutator reverses the
direction of the current in the coil.
• This flips the
north and south
poles of the
magnetic field
around the coil.
Electricity and Magnetism
1.2
Making the Motor Spin
• Step 4. The coil rotates until its poles are
opposite the poles of the permanent magnet.
• The
commutator
reverses the
current, and
the coil keeps
rotating.
Section Check
1.2
Question 1
Who correctly hypothesized that electric
current produces a magnetic field?
A. Neils Bohr
B. Heinrich Hertz
C. Hans Christian Oersted
D. Max Planck
Section Check
1.2
Answer
The answer is C. In 1820, Oersted
hypothesized that electric current produces
a magnetic field and that the direction of
the field changes with the direction of the
current.
Section Check
1.2
Question 2
How can you make an electromagnet?
Answer
An electromagnet is a temporary magnet
made by wrapping a wire coil carrying a
current around an iron core.
Section Check
1.2
Question 3
Which of the following is a device that uses
an electromagnet to measure current?
A. electric motor
B. galvanometer
C. generator
D. transformer
Section Check
1.2
Answer
The answer is B. In a galvanometer, the
electromagnet is connected to a small spring.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
From Mechanical to Electrical
Energy
• Working independently in 1831, Michael
Faraday in Britain and Joseph Henry in the
United States both found that moving a loop
of wire through a magnetic field caused an
electric current to flow in the wire.
• They also found that moving a magnet
through a loop of wire produces a current.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
From Mechanical to Electrical
Energy
• The magnet and wire loop must be moving
relative to each other for an electric current
to be produced.
• This causes the magnetic field inside the
loop to change with time.
• The generation of a current by a changing
magnetic field is electromagnetic
induction.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generators
• A generator uses electromagnetic induction
to transform mechanical energy into
electrical energy.
• An example of a simple
generator is shown. In
this type of generator, a
current is produced in the
coil as the coil rotates
between the poles of a
permanent magnet.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Switching Direction
• In a generator, as the coil keeps rotating,
the current that is produced periodically
changes direction.
• The direction
of the current
in the coil
changes twice
with each
revolution.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Switching Direction
• The frequency with which the current
changes direction can be controlled by
regulating the rotation rate of the generator.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Using Electric Generators
• The type of generator shown is used in a
car, where it is called an alternator.
• The alternator
provides electrical
energy to operate
lights and other
accessories.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Electrical energy comes from a power plant
with huge generators.
• The coils in these
generators have
many coils of
wire wrapped
around huge iron
cores.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• The rotating magnets are connected to a
turbine (TUR bine)a large wheel that
rotates when pushed by water, wind, or
steam.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Some power plants first produce thermal
energy by burning fossil fuels or using the
heat produced by nuclear reactions.
• This thermal energy is used to heat water
and produce steam.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Thermal energy is then converted to
mechanical energy as the steam pushes
the turbine blades.
• The generator then changes the mechanical
energy of the rotating turbine into the
electrical energy you use.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• In some areas, fields
of windmills can be
used to capture the
mechanical energy
in wind to turn
generators.
• Other power plants use the mechanical
energy in falling water to drive the turbine.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Generating Electricity for Your
Home
• Both generators and electric motors use
magnets to produce energy conversions
between electrical and mechanical energy.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Direct and Alternating Currents
• Because power outages sometimes occur,
some electrical devices use batteries as a
backup source of electrical energy.
• However, the
current produced
by a battery is
different than the
current from an
electric
generator.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Direct and Alternating Currents
• A battery produces a direct current.
• Direct current (DC) flows only in one
direction through a wire.
• When you plug your CD player or any other
appliance into a wall outlet, you are using
alternating current. Alternating current
(AC) reverses the direction of the current in
a regular pattern.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Electrical Energy
• When the electric energy is transmitted along
power lines, some of the electrical energy is
converted into heat due to the electrical
resistance of the wires.
• The electrical
resistance and heat
production increases
as the wires get
longer.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transmitting Electrical Energy
• One way to reduce the heat produced in a
power line is to transmit the electrical
energy at high voltages, typically around
150,000 V.
• Electrical energy at such high voltage cannot
enter your home safely, nor can it be used in
home appliances.
• A transformer is used to decrease the
voltage.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• A transformer is a device that increases or
decreases the voltage of an alternating
current.
• A transformer is
made of a primary
coil and a
secondary coil.
• These wire coils are
wrapped around the
same iron core.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• As an alternating current passes through the
primary coil, the coil’s magnetic field
magnetizes the iron core.
• The magnetic field
in the primary coil
changes direction
as the current in the
primary coil
changes direction.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• This produces a magnetic field in the iron
core that changes direction at the same
frequency.
• The changing magnetic field in the iron core
then induces an alternating current with the
same frequency in the secondary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
• The changing magnetic field in the iron core
then induces an alternating current with the
same frequency in the secondary coil.
Producing Electric Current
1.3
Transformers
Question 1
What is electromagnetic induction?
Answer
Electromagnetic induction is the generation
of a current by a changing magnetic field.
Section Check
1.3
Question 2
In a power plant, what is the function of the
turbine?
Section Check
1.3
Answer
The turbine is a large wheel that rotates
when pushed by water, wind or steam. The
plant’s generator changes the mechanical
energy of the rotating turbine into electrical
energy.
Section Check
1.3
Question 3
Which will increase the voltage of an
alternating current?
A. battery
B. generator
C. motor
D. transformer
Section Check
1.3
Answer
The answer is D. Transformers can also
decrease voltage, such as in a step-down
transformer.
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