EMF and flux explained

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • An explanation of flux and how a changing flux leads to an EMF
    Covers Faraday's Law too
    See www.physicshigh.com for all my videos and other resources.
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Комментарии • 82

  • @akshatzz_iitb6052
    @akshatzz_iitb6052 3 года назад +16

    I still don't understand how does changing flux produce emf

  • @anuragvipin9317
    @anuragvipin9317 4 года назад +37

    The best video regarding flux in all of RUclips. Thanks a lot. I'm only in 10 th yet understood it perfectly. Keep up the good work

  • @emmalintelman9852
    @emmalintelman9852 3 года назад +15

    Absolutely fantastic! I don't think I've understood a physics concept faster. I hope your students realize how lucky they are to have you. Thank you so much.

  • @varmaavinash1020
    @varmaavinash1020 5 лет назад +29

    Such a beautiful explanation.
    From 🇮🇳 ❤

  • @jeffclark2675
    @jeffclark2675 Год назад +3

    I have a BSEE degree which obviously included multiple classes in high level electromagnetic field and calculus....in the 5 minutes it took to watch this video i now understand the physical component of this concept better than i ever have...bravo sir!

  • @mmekucuk
    @mmekucuk 6 лет назад +21

    Really helpful and it finished all my confusing. Thanks a lot

  • @duckyoutube6318
    @duckyoutube6318 Год назад +2

    What determines the magnitude of flux? And how much energy escapes from the system because of flux?
    Is flux the same as friction?
    These are the questions i have had in my head all week. Hope the video answers them.

  • @guitarttimman
    @guitarttimman 2 года назад +3

    This is a great straight forward way of explaining this concept. Thank you.

  • @caleblott399
    @caleblott399 2 года назад +3

    Give this man a medal!

  • @TheWizardVampire
    @TheWizardVampire 4 года назад +7

    Love the rain analogy.

  • @roshanrawal4134
    @roshanrawal4134 2 года назад +2

    Clear concept of flux❤ thank you!

  • @yousuf.x77
    @yousuf.x77 3 года назад +5

    يمكن انا الطالب الوحيد يلي جاي من حصه زياد رواشده 😂♥️

  • @dhruvalwadhi
    @dhruvalwadhi 2 года назад

    BEST EXPLANATION OF FLUX EVER!

  • @tanayparekh789
    @tanayparekh789 3 года назад +1

    Thank you sir for making the concept seem so much more easier.

  • @grahamh7041
    @grahamh7041 3 года назад +1

    Great analogy - thanks.

  • @rachnagupta7311
    @rachnagupta7311 5 лет назад +4

    This is the best explanation!!!!

  • @artificiallift9110
    @artificiallift9110 6 лет назад +11

    Such a great explanation, keep it up

  • @pravin4416
    @pravin4416 3 года назад

    THANK YOU SO MUCH SIR FOR THE WONDERFUL EXPLANATION...... KEEPING TECHING LIKE THIS FOR US.....

  • @anthonypape6862
    @anthonypape6862 2 года назад +2

    Can you please help with the following questions:
    1) every demo on this topic uses a rotating coil or copper loop or a magnet fixed to a rotor and facing a stator of copper coils. Sometimes a magnet is pushed into and pulled out of the coil. The question is: Is one method superior to the other
    2) along your line of rain analogy. What if instead of rain I had a powerful garden hose opined right in the middle of the loop as you rotate it. And compare with giant drum of water that when poured consumes the entire area of the loop. Assuming the exact same amount of water sits through the loop is one type of flux preferred k we the other )super concentrated bs large surface area?

    • @Rayan-id3gk
      @Rayan-id3gk 2 года назад

      Number 2) I assume you mean what if it was between 2 small magnets which produce a narrow B line. Well it doesn’t change much because eventually flux is still going to equal 0. It just means that it would take a little longer to actually start making a difference from maximum flux

  • @justinejacob6369
    @justinejacob6369 5 лет назад +2

    Fantastic explanation. Thank you.

  • @Poop-nu1so
    @Poop-nu1so 5 лет назад +3

    You are a great teacher, thanks for your video!

  • @gloriainnocentia1389
    @gloriainnocentia1389 3 года назад

    wow. such an awesome pedagogy

  • @meenothkumarkrishnakumar829
    @meenothkumarkrishnakumar829 2 года назад

    tnx, really helpful to understand the concept.

  • @see576
    @see576 2 года назад

    thanks a lot for this intuitive explanation

  • @where0is0my0mind
    @where0is0my0mind 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for this video! Such a clear explanation.

  • @davidm3210
    @davidm3210 3 года назад +1

    Very helpful, thank you!

  • @mahuubao
    @mahuubao 2 года назад

    Excellent ... well done ...

  • @dr.waleedsalem
    @dr.waleedsalem 2 года назад

    Thanks to explan

  • @gauravkumar-fr4si
    @gauravkumar-fr4si 3 года назад

    beautiful explanation

  • @Festus2022
    @Festus2022 Год назад

    BUT> what if you had 2 loops to collect rain, both loops perfectly aligned (as in a wire coil)? Would the flux double? You are still collecting the same amount of rain, but your 3D area has doubled. Would the RATE of flux change stay the same or double?

  • @umaisharahman6109
    @umaisharahman6109 3 года назад

    Thankuu soo much for this It helps vryyy muchhh😊

  • @meorluk5133
    @meorluk5133 2 года назад

    thank you, this is what I needed

  • @te4683
    @te4683 2 года назад

    Yes. Finaly. Now i understand. 🥇

  • @syncstudy8792
    @syncstudy8792 2 года назад

    Thank you so much sir 🙏

  • @vihanroy2842
    @vihanroy2842 4 года назад +1

    Hi
    I was wondering if you could give us a video on EMF vs Potential Difference. Or just an explanation.
    Thanks

    • @PhysicsHigh
      @PhysicsHigh  4 года назад +7

      Actually the two are the same.
      Emf is the old term but we now understand it as voltage or potential difference

  • @bradlyons6828
    @bradlyons6828 4 года назад

    If two like sides (two magnetic north polarity sides or two magnetic south polarity sides) of wafer or ring magnets are forced together with super glue or epoxy cement, would this create a high density or concentrated magnetic flux field? If so, would the flux field produce a scalar wave energy field around the two magnets glued together? If anyone knows, please leave me a reply. If the two magnets glued together are placed on a sheet of copper, would the concentrated magnetic flux field energize the copper? If the two magnets glued together were placed inside the resin of an orgonite pyramid or orgonite charging plate, would the magnetic flux field of the two magnets cause the orgonite to convert positive ions into negative ions?

  • @coleabrahams9331
    @coleabrahams9331 3 года назад

    This is a great analogy

  • @yonatanbitterfeld3347
    @yonatanbitterfeld3347 3 года назад

    love the analogy

  • @RohitThakur-fz8ic
    @RohitThakur-fz8ic 6 лет назад +1

    tx my confusion was now clear

  • @shearer8368
    @shearer8368 4 года назад

    YOU ARE A LEGEND

  • @georgestanciu5466
    @georgestanciu5466 2 года назад

    Can I ask what is in the magnetic flux lines? what they contain?

  • @YourDailyDoseofContent
    @YourDailyDoseofContent 3 года назад

    super useful thanks

  • @ryanthegooch5952
    @ryanthegooch5952 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much!

  • @xila8861
    @xila8861 3 года назад

    Thankyou. I still didn't understand the negative part.

  • @AhmedEbrahim-ct6ii
    @AhmedEbrahim-ct6ii 4 года назад +1

    Brilliant ❤

  • @guybro1709
    @guybro1709 5 лет назад +2

    Hello sir, around about 2:56, for the graph for flux, instead of oscillating between the positive and negative region shouldn't it always be positive? As flux is purely just a measure of the amount of field lines threading through the loop?

    • @madagalaharivardhan9412
      @madagalaharivardhan9412 5 лет назад

      Please reply ... I also having same doubt

    • @jacobvandijk6525
      @jacobvandijk6525 5 лет назад

      I think you're right. I've never seen "negative rain" in a bucket ;-) But mathematically there is a change of sign after a rotation of 1 pi in a sine-function.

    • @pravinm21
      @pravinm21 4 года назад +1

      The cosine vector changes from 0° to 90° to 180° to 270° and back to 360° which is equal to 0°. Substitute the angels and that's why it oscillates through positive and negative side.

  • @exodusmercy303
    @exodusmercy303 3 года назад

    Finally i understand this lesson thank you

  • @angelsintahoe
    @angelsintahoe 6 лет назад +3

    Did he say the 3rd graph is the EMF?

  • @ZaibJ
    @ZaibJ 7 лет назад +1

    Helps so much!!!

  • @AshrafGhedan
    @AshrafGhedan 2 года назад +1

    من طرف زباد الرواشدة :)

  • @rubamadi5361
    @rubamadi5361 3 года назад

    This is so clever

  • @no-de3lg
    @no-de3lg 4 года назад

    Emf stands for electro magmetic field right ?? Does this emf represents the electron motion in the atom so negtive means electron nearest the next atom and postive means the electron farthest away from thr next atom and this change is what causes the production of emf radiation

    • @mosup5007
      @mosup5007 4 года назад

      force

    • @vaadwilsla858
      @vaadwilsla858 4 года назад

      It stands for electromotive force... The idea is that when you have an induced electric field (so one created by a change in magnetic flux) it will create a current. A current is basically the motion of electrons, and to move the electrons there must be work done. The current moves over a closed path: consider the work done to move a unit charge over the closed path as the emf. It gets confusing, because the emf is not actually a force, it is a measure of work per unit charge, and therefore has units Nm/C or simply Volts. It is an example of unfortunate naming in physics.

  • @shanumohammed4422
    @shanumohammed4422 3 года назад

    Love from iNDIA 🇮🇳🇮🇳

  • @kathalberto1332
    @kathalberto1332 4 года назад +1

    THIS SAVED ME ;-; THANK YOU

    • @PhysicsHigh
      @PhysicsHigh  4 года назад

      You’re welcome

    • @mohamedtaha2025
      @mohamedtaha2025 4 года назад

      @@PhysicsHigh plz can you explain further why the rate of change for magnetic flux start from maximum
      I can't understand why it starts at the maximum value!

    • @Maddy-pf9ib
      @Maddy-pf9ib 4 года назад

      @@mohamedtaha2025 If you graphed a tangent to the flux function, you would see that after 0 the gradient of the function decreases until it reaches 0 (local max)

  • @dopemjay6697
    @dopemjay6697 3 года назад

    I like u....im subscribing liking and all there is to it

  • @kavyajain2210
    @kavyajain2210 3 года назад

    How rate of change of flux is maximum when flux is zero. Plz explain it🙏

    • @PhysicsHigh
      @PhysicsHigh  3 года назад +2

      I thought I did. When flux is zero on the graph, the slope of the graph is at a maximum. That slope is the rate of change of flux.

  • @nikylemoodley6629
    @nikylemoodley6629 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for posting this video. My textbook does not explain it properly.

  • @sivakumaranbazhagan1672
    @sivakumaranbazhagan1672 4 года назад

    what is that delta t in the denominator , is it time?

    • @PhysicsHigh
      @PhysicsHigh  4 года назад +2

      Yes. The delta just means “change in”.

  • @suryajaps2395
    @suryajaps2395 3 года назад

    What is this emf?

    • @PhysicsHigh
      @PhysicsHigh  3 года назад

      EMF is a voltage or potential difference

  • @pepsiatlas5452
    @pepsiatlas5452 5 лет назад

    neat

  • @amirtheshappu9378
    @amirtheshappu9378 3 года назад

    ❤️