Lenz's law

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Physicist Emil Lenz (pronounced Template:IPAc-en) formulated Lenz's law in 1834, after which it was named for him.

Magnetic fields

"The direction of current induced in a conductor by a changing magnetic field due to Faraday's law of induction will be such that it will create a field that opposes the change that produced it."[1]

For current I that generates a magnetic field

B=LI

The induced current generated

ϕ=NB=NLI

Theoretical Lenz's law

Def. "a law of electromagnetic induction which states that an electromotive force, induced in a conductor, is always in such a direction that the current it would produce would oppose the change which caused it; it is a form of the law of conservation of energy"[2] is called Lenz's law.

References

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