yes
*edit: don't confuse moving with changing. A change in magnetic field strength/direction will induce an electric current.
Yes, they do.
In a conductor - only if the field is moving, thus changing.
Your question is not quite crystal clear. However, a magnetic field is produced by a moving electric charge. Ordinarily, a current passing through a conductor will produce a magnetic field. In a fixed magnet, a group of the electrons has been organized so that their spins are aligned and this produces a permanent magnet. The Earth's magnetic field is the net result of a number of individual fields caused by electric currents generated in the hot interior of the mantle.
Yes, a moving electric charge creates a magnetic field
Magnetism, an aspect of electromagnetism, one of the fundamental forces of nature. Objects such as a bar magnet can influence other magnetic materials, without physically connecting them, because magnetic objects produce a magnetic field. Magnetic fields are usually represented by magnetic flux lines. Magnetic fields influence magnetic materials and also influence charged particles that move through the magnetic field.
No, a voltage will be generated, not a current. Current will only flow if the induced voltage is connected to a load.
Electrons moving is an electric current. An electric current moving at an angle to a magnetic field will produce a Force.
They're both true, but I'm not comfortable with the way they're stated. I would have said: -- Electric current through a wire produces magnetic force. -- Moving electrons constitute an electric current, whether or not they're moing througha magnetic field.
Moving charges produce magnetic fields.Answer 2In other words, when the charge moves along a conductor it creates an electric current. The current induces a magnetic field around the conductor.
A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.A moving electric charge will produce a magnetic field.
Michael Faraday
The magnetic force acts only on moving electric charges; A constant electric current produces an unchanging magnetic field and a changing electric current produces a changing magnetic field.
Not exactly. A CHANGING magnetic field, or a material moving through a magnetic field, will produce a VOLTAGE. This may or may not result in an actual current.
There's something seriously wrong with the question's hypotheses.Current is moving charge, and moving charge is current.
yes
A moving magnetic field produces current
Yes, a MOVING magnetic field will cause electric current to flow in a conductor. Conversely an electric current flowing in a conductor will cause a magnetic field.
yes*edit: don't confuse moving with changing. A change in magnetic field strength/direction will induce an electric current.