You coil a wire and pass it through a magnetic field you will produce electricity.
A spinning magnet inside a coil of copper wire will produce electricity.
Weight is the pull of gravity on mass. Of itself weight can not produce electricity.
Coal can't generate electricity by itself, but through the process of combustion, it can produce heat which can be used to produce steam that can run turbines which are connected to generators that produces electricity.
Yes. Copper is a very popular material used to make electrical wires.
A wire moving in a magnetic field will automatically produce an emf (a voltage).
It produces a magnetic field. Vice versa, when you run a magnet past a wire you generate an electric current. Electricity and magnetism are related. If you have electricity you can generate magnetism, if you have a magnet you can produce electricity.
Faraday showed that a wire passing through a magnetic field will produce electricity. This is how a generator works. Many windings of wire on an armature spin in a magnetic field. This makes electricity.
They are opposite "sides" of the electromagnetic force. A moving magnetic field produces electricity and a moving electric field produces magnetism. Should both move alternately they produce electromagnetic radiation.
So the wire doesn't short itself out. The electricity needs to go through all the windings individually.
So the wire doesn't short itself out. The electricity needs to go through all the windings individually.
ohms is ohms not used to measure resistance in the wire?
an electric current can produce a magnetic field. then,magnetic field within the core of wire will induced the voltage. so magnetic will produce from current at the galvanometer and magnet was far from galvanometer and it induces the voltage