All conductors have inductance. But all conductors are not used as inductors
Water & Sodium are conductors I'm pretty sure they are not magnetic
No. Unless a current is flowing.
Not all conuctors are magnetic for example people can use a lemon use people to connect the wire which goes through their body to the other lemon to close the circut:)
While not intrinsically magnetic necessarily, conducting current means a magnetic field is formed.
No, some materials (water, for example) conduct electricity and are incapable of becoming magnetic.
The left hand rule for conductors says that your fingers will point in the direction of the resulting magnetic field. The magnetic field is produced by the electron flow.
Most metals are NOT magnetic; Iron, Steel (Contains Iron in it), Nickel and Cobalt are the only magnetic materials. Nearly ALL metals are electrical conductors, however, so don't get it mixed up. Last edited (re-written) by 09pwang.
Good Electrical conductors: All metals, ionic substances (in solution or molten form) Bad Electrical conductors: Water Good Heat conductors: All Metals Bad Heat Conductors: Water
None of the most commonly used elemental conductors are magnetic.
a high magnetic field
conductors
While not intrinsically magnetic necessarily, conducting current means a magnetic field is formed.
No, some materials (water, for example) conduct electricity and are incapable of becoming magnetic.
Yes, by moving the conductors through the magnetic field.
The left hand rule for conductors says that your fingers will point in the direction of the resulting magnetic field. The magnetic field is produced by the electron flow.
A magnetic conductor is a material that supports free movement of magnetic charge (magnetic monopoles), similar to an electric conductor that allows free movement of electric charges. On average the net charge is neutral. Of course, magnetic monopoles do not exist, but clever engineering can produce close to the same effects. Importantly, magnetic conductors have hugely different boundary conditions from electric conductors in electromagnetics and physics. A major research breakthrough in demonstration of wideband magnetic conductors was published in 2011 in "Wideband Artificial Magnetic Conductors Loaded With Non-Foster Negative Inductors" by Gregoire, D.J. ; HRL Labs., LLC, Malibu, CA, USA ; White, C.R. ; Colburn, J.S..
A magnetic conductor is a material that supports free movement of magnetic charge (magnetic monopoles), similar to an electric conductor that allows free movement of electric charges. On average the net charge is neutral. Of course, magnetic monopoles do not exist, but clever engineering can produce close to the same effects. Importantly, magnetic conductors have hugely different boundary conditions from electric conductors in electromagnetics and physics. A major research breakthrough in demonstration of wideband magnetic conductors was published in 2011 in "Wideband Artificial Magnetic Conductors Loaded With Non-Foster Negative Inductors" by Gregoire, D.J. ; HRL Labs., LLC, Malibu, CA, USA ; White, C.R. ; Colburn, J.S..
Most metals are NOT magnetic; Iron, Steel (Contains Iron in it), Nickel and Cobalt are the only magnetic materials. Nearly ALL metals are electrical conductors, however, so don't get it mixed up. Last edited (re-written) by 09pwang.
The voltage was produce by cutting of the magnetic flux by the conductors.
Well, iron and its alloys are ferromagnetic and they are conductors.