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Paper 2
Magnetism and Electromagetism
The Motor Effect
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Created by
Jasmine Price
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Cards (17)
What is produced when current flows through a
conducting wire
?
A
magnetic field
is produced around the
wire
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Magnetic field around a current-carrying wire
The
magnitude
of the current flowing through the wire
The
distance
from the wire
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Solenoid
A coil of
wire
which when current passes through creates a strong
magnetic
field
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Magnetic field inside a solenoid
Strong
and
uniform
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Electromagnet
A
solenoid
with an added
iron
core
Adding the iron core
increases
the
strength
of the magnetic field
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Motor effect
When a force is exerted between a
magnetic field
and a current-carrying
conductor
placed in that field
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Fleming's Left-Hand Rule
Used to determine the
force
experienced due to the
motor effect
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Fleming's left hand rule
Forefinger
points in the direction of the
magnetic field
Second finger points in the direction of
current flow
in the
conductor
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Force on a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field
The
magnitude
of the current flowing through the
conductor
The
strength
of the magnetic field that the
conductor
is placed in
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If the direction of current in a current-carrying wire placed in a uniform magnetic field is
reversed
The direction of the force is
reversed
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If the
strength
of the current in a current-carrying wire placed in a uniform magnetic field is
increased
The
strength
of the force is
increased
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The
conductor
must be at right-angles to the magnetic field it is placed in for the equation linking force,
magnetic flux density
, current and length to hold
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Magnetic flux density
Tesla
,
T
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How an electric motor works
1. A coil of
wire
, carrying a current, is placed in a
magnetic field
2. The forces on the two sides perpendicular to the
field
experience forces in
opposite
directions
3. This causes a
rotational effect
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How loudspeakers make use of the motor effect
The motor effect is used to
convert
variations in the current of an electrical circuit into the
pressure
variations which produce audible sound
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How a loudspeaker works
1. A cone with a
wire
wrapped around it is connected to an a.c
power supply
and is placed in a permanent magnetic field
2. When current flows through the wire, it creates a
second
magnetic field, which interacts with the
permanent field
3. This produces a
force
which causes the cone to
vibrate
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How the pitch of the sound from a loudspeaker is changed
The frequency of the a.c current is
altered
This creates a different frequency of
vibration
in the
cone
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