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Magnet and coil

Class experiment

An introduction to the dynamo principle.

Apparatus and materials

For each student group


Safety

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Procedure

Magnet and coil
a Wind a coil of 10 to 20 turns with long leads (say 50 cm). The coils should be such that a permanent bar magnet can pass freely through.
 
b Connect the long leads to the galvanometer.
 
c Move the magnet in the space in and around the coil, keeping an eye on the galvanometer. Summarize your observations.


Teaching notes

1 You might introduce this experiment by saying:
 
A dynamo or generator is a carefully-designed piece of equipment. There is a coil of wire and a magnetic field. There is motion. Electricity (a voltage) is generated. You can understand the principle of the dynamo by starting with a simpler situation: you have a coil and a magnet, and you can move them. What will you discover?
 
2 The students should find out that:
 
• the current flows only when the magnet and the coil are moving relative to each other;
 
• the current changes direction when the magnet is inserted into the coil and then removed from the coil;
 
• more turns on the coil produce bigger currents provided the total length (i.e. the total resistance) of the wire remains the same;
 
• the faster the magnet is moved, the greater is the maximum deflection.
 
This experiment was saftey-checked in April 2006

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Magnet and coil http://www.practicalphysics.org/go/Experiment_338.html

An introduction to the dynamo principle.

Updated 30 Jun 2009

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