No, to shield a magnetic field you need a magnetizable material with high permeability and low permanence. The most commonly used alloy for this purpose is called mumetal, an alloy of nickel and iron.
no
Whenever a charge passes through a conductor, a magnetic field is produced. Hence, whenever a current carrying conductor is placed in a magnetic filed, it will experience a force whose direction is determined by Fleming's left hand rule.
You can have only one current carrying conductor in a conduit, but that conduit must have a slot to relieve the eddy currents that will be created by the transformer effect created by the conductor. It is better to run the neutral or opposite conductor along with the hot conductor together in the same conduit, or through the same penetration, so as to minimize this effect.
When magnetic flux lines of force are cut by induced voltage between magnetic and electric currents. Electromagnetic induction is created.
Through a current in a conductor; it is strengthened once by making a coil of the conductor and then by inserting an easily magnetized core inside the coil
the compass aligns with the magnetic field created by the wire
An electromagnet is created when an Fe core is wrapped in a conductor and an electric current goes through the conductor; magnetism and electrical current have a symbiotic relationship -- when a conductor is moved in a magnetic field, electrons start to move and when electrons move through a conductor, a magnetic field is created around the conductor; a simple motor uses an electromagnet to do work.
Yes Ofcourse ,when a curren is allowed to pass through a conductor,"IT IS BEING SURROUNDED BY MAGNETIC FIENLD".... Because it somehow behaves as the electromagnet as per FARADAY LAW OF ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION.............
In a sense, yes. Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) makes use of a conducting plasma 'jet' passing through a magnetic field to produce a voltage. It works on the same principle as generator -i.e. a conductor moving through a magnetic field will have an emf. induced into that conductor. In the case of MHD, the 'conductor' is the plasma jet.
By passing an electric current through any conductor, a magnetic field will be created. Therefore, a simple electromagnet can be created by connecting a power source to a coil of copper wire.
Three things you need to make an electromagnetic are a magnetic field, an electric current, and a conductor or coil of wire. When an electric current flows through the conductor, a magnetic field is created around it, resulting in an electromagnetic effect.
Both magnetic materials and moving electric charges induce magnetic fields. "A magnetic field can be created with moving charges, such as a current-carrying wire. A magnetic field can also be created by the spin magnetic dipole moment, and by the orbital magnetic dipole moment of an electron within an atom." A magnetic field can be produced by either a permanent magnet, or an electromagnet, the latter requiring suitable energization to function.
Carrying On was created in 2000.