My Name is Khan
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2012
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- HSC
- 2014
yayyy!If more coils are present, the magnet will be repelled more and more work must be done, right?
Yes, the answer is D
yayyy!If more coils are present, the magnet will be repelled more and more work must be done, right?
Yes, the answer is D
haha dude i am totally trippin out right now because of your question now lol. but its a good thing because i know i need to clarify this idea properly. I will get back to u with a proper answer tomorrowOkay, to clarify, if a higher emf (and hence, current) is induced in the coil due to more coil, this creates higher magnetic repulsion (due to higher current) meaning that more work must be done on the magnet - right? This would be the only intuitively-correct scenario (for me, at least).
Yeah, bed time.haha dude i am totally trippin out right now because of your question now lol. but its a good thing because i know i need to clarify this idea properly. I will get back to u with a proper answer tomorrow
he has got his answer already matehaha dude i am totally trippin out right now because of your question now lol. but its a good thing because i know i need to clarify this idea properly. I will get back to u with a proper answer tomorrow
proper explanation for the answer dude. Also, you need to learn your stuff because your explanations weren't even close at all.he has got his answer already mate
Getting the answer is just one part, understanding how you got the answer is another...he has got his answer already mate
He's had the answer the whole time.he has got his answer already mate
Yeah, this paper wasn't good for the most part, at all - if you look around at it, it wasn't a quality trial paper. I haven't really seen many good CSSA papers for science...I don't like how this question is constructed. Then again it is the Catholic paper.
My teacher told me "the dodgier the better" as it gets you thinking rather than reciting knowledge from the textbook.Yeah, this paper wasn't good for the most part, at all - if you look around at it, it wasn't a quality trial paper. I haven't really seen many good CSSA papers for science...
Well, some of the questions are decent - I suppose, however, some of the multiple choice questions have very debatable questions such as giving the velocity and acceleration of a projectile where the velocity of A/B are both correct but acceleration is 9.8 and -9.8...awesome.My teacher told me "the dodgier the better" as it gets you thinking rather than reciting knowledge from the textbook.
For this, you should note that it's not actually an increase in B or I that is "creating" more power. The force on the magnet due to Lenz's Law (sort of but not really represented by T in the formula I used to conceptualise the question) will also increase to balance out the increase in current. However, this doesn't change anything because as the question states, it is a repeat of the experiment, so all other variables (including the speed of the magnet) are to remain the same.It just seems counter-intuitive that if you have a lot more coils, you'll end up with a lot of power...(higher emf and higher current)
HmmSince the force is quadrupled, the relative motion between the coil/magnet is 4 times greater
If n and B doubled, shouldn't current need to be a quarter?T=nBIAcos(theta) could be of help.
You look at the second set-up, and note that there are two magnets together (presumably double the magnetic field strength, since they don't mention anything else), and also double the number of turns. Seeing as the question says they are repeating the experiment, it would be pretty safe to assume that all other variables remain the same.
So then you look at the formula and see that n (number of turns in the coil) is doubled, and B (magnetic field strength is doubled). Torque and angle don't really figure in this because it's not about a rotating coil/magnetic field, so the only other variable is area and current. Assuming area remains constant then (which it should, cause otherwise it'd be crap experimental procedure), current must quadruple for the equation to remain at the same value.