Not quite. EM braking relies on the metal disc experiencing a changing magnetic flux (achieved through either only a portion of the disc immersed in a magnetic field, or a changing magnetic field provided by electromagnets).It slows down. That's how em braking works.
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Doesn't the spinning of the disk cause a change in magnetic flux?Not quite. EM braking relies on the metal disc experiencing a changing magnetic flux (achieved through either only a portion of the disc immersed in a magnetic field, or a changing magnetic field provided by electromagnets).
In the above setup, it is not (since disc entirely immersed in constant magnetic field).
You're right, but think about this. As the disc rotates, the amount of magnetic flux threading any area on the disc is not changing.Doesn't the spinning of the disk cause a change in magnetic flux?