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Class XII ⚛️ Physics ~12 MCQs/year Ch 6 of 14

Electromagnetic Induction

CUET unit: Electromagnetic Induction

📌 Snapshot

  • Establishes that a time-varying magnetic flux through a circuit induces an emf — the foundational link between electricity and magnetism discovered by Faraday and Henry around 1830.
  • Develops the quantitative laws: magnetic flux Φ_B = B·A = BA cos θ, Faraday's law ε = −dΦ_B/dt (or −N dΦ_B/dt for an N-turn coil), and Lenz's law for the sign (rooted in energy conservation).
  • Introduces motional emf ε = Blv from a moving conductor and shows it can be derived independently from the Lorentz force on free charges.
  • Defines inductance (self and mutual) as the geometric/material constant relating flux linkage to current, with worked formulas for long solenoids and coaxial solenoid pairs.
  • The AC generator applies these ideas: ε = NBAω sin ωt.

📖 Detailed Notes

2.1 Core concepts

  • Oersted, Ampere and others established that moving charges produce magnetic fields; the converse — that a changing magnetic field can drive currents in a closed coil — was demonstrated independently by Faraday (England) and Henry (USA) around 1830 (NCERT §6.1, p. 154).
  • Experiment 6.1: a galvanometer connected to a coil deflects when a bar magnet is moved towards or away from the coil; deflection reverses if the pole is reversed, is larger for faster motion, and is zero when the magnet is stationary — it is the relative motion between magnet and coil that matters (NCERT §6.2, p. 155).
  • Experiment 6.2: replacing the bar magnet with a second current-carrying coil C2 reproduces the effect; moving C2 relative to C1 induces a current in C1, again driven by relative motion (NCERT §6.2, p. 155-156).
  • Experiment 6.3: two stationary coils — pressing the tapping key in coil C2 produces a momentary deflection in C1; holding the key down gives no deflection; releasing it gives a momentary deflection in the opposite direction. Inserting an iron rod dramatically increases the effect, showing that change of flux (not motion per se) is the cause (NCERT §6.2, p. 156).
  • Magnetic flux through a plane of area A in a uniform field B is Φ_B = B·A = BA cos θ; for non-uniform fields and curved surfaces, Φ_B = Σ B_i · dA_i; SI unit is the weber (Wb) = T·m²; flux is a scalar (NCERT §6.3, p. 156-157).
  • Faraday's law: the magnitude of induced emf equals the time rate of change of magnetic flux, ε = −dΦ_B/dt; for a closely wound coil of N turns, ε = −N dΦ_B/dt; the negative sign encodes direction (Lenz) (NCERT §6.4, p. 157-158).
  • Flux can be changed by varying B, by changing area A (stretching/shrinking the coil), or by changing θ (rotating the coil) — all produce induced emf (NCERT §6.4, p. 158).
  • Lenz's law (Heinrich Friedrich Lenz, 1834): the polarity of induced emf is such that the induced current opposes the change in flux that produced it. If the opposite were true, a small push on a magnet would create runaway acceleration — a perpetual motion machine — violating conservation of energy; therefore work done by the agent moving the magnet appears as Joule heat in the induced current (NCERT §6.5, p. 160).
  • Motional emf: for a rod of length l moving with velocity v perpendicular to a uniform field B (and to its own length), Φ_B = Blx, so ε = −dΦ_B/dt = Blv. The same expression follows from the Lorentz force qvB on each free charge — work qvBl per charge gives emf Blv (NCERT §6.6, p. 162-163).
  • For a stationary conductor in a time-varying B, the force on charges is purely qE (since v = 0), so a time-varying magnetic field must generate an electric field — this induced electric field is different in nature from the electrostatic field produced by static charges (NCERT §6.6, p. 163).
  • For a rod of length R rotating with angular speed ω about one end in a field B parallel to the axis, the motional emf between centre and tip is ε = BωR²/2 (NCERT §6.6, Example 6.6, p. 163-164).
  • Inductance: in any geometry-fixed coil, flux linkage NΦ_B ∝ I; the constant of proportionality is the inductance. It depends only on geometry and intrinsic material properties; SI unit is the henry (H), dimensions [M L² T⁻² A⁻²] (NCERT §6.7, p. 165).
  • Mutual inductance M for two long coaxial solenoids (inner radius r1, turns/length n1; outer turns/length n2; common length l): M = μ0 n1 n2 π r1² l. In a medium of relative permeability μ_r, M = μ_r μ0 n1 n2 π r1² l. M12 = M21 = M is general, even when only one direction is easy to compute (NCERT §6.7.1, p. 165-167).
  • Mutual-induction emf: ε1 = −M dI2/dt — a changing current in one coil induces emf in a neighbouring coil (NCERT §6.7.1, p. 167).
  • Self-inductance: when current in a single coil changes, NΦ_B = LI, and ε = −L dI/dt; the self-induced emf is also called the back emf because it opposes any change (increase or decrease) of current (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 168).
  • Self-inductance of a long solenoid (cross-section A, length l, n turns per unit length): L = μ0 n² A l (air core); L = μ_r μ0 n² A l (core of relative permeability μ_r) (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 168).
  • Work done against the back emf in establishing a current I is stored as magnetic energy W = ½ L I²; L plays the role of inertia (mass-analogue) for current; magnetic energy density u_B = B²/(2μ0) (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 168-170).
  • For two simultaneously-current-carrying nearby coils, flux in coil 1 is N1Φ1 = M11 I1 + M12 I2 = L1 I1 + M I2, so ε1 = −L1 dI1/dt − M12 dI2/dt (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 169).
  • AC generator (credited to Nicola Tesla in its developed form): an armature coil of N turns and area A is rotated with constant angular speed ω in a uniform field B. With θ = ωt, Φ_B = BA cos ωt, so ε = NBAω sin ωt = ε0 sin ωt with ε0 = NBAω; commercial frequency is 50 Hz in India, 60 Hz in the USA (NCERT §6.8, p. 170-172).
  • Energy stored in an inductor is analogous to kinetic energy of a moving mass: W = ½LI² mirrors K = ½mv², with L taking the role of inertia and I that of velocity. This analogy underpins the conservation arguments used for LC oscillations in the next chapter (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 168-170).
  • Magnetic energy density: u_B = B²/(2μ₀) for an air-cored region; this is the magnetic counterpart of the electric energy density u_E = ½ε₀E² that students met in Chapter 2, and integrating it over the solenoid volume reproduces ½LI² (NCERT §6.7.2, p. 170).
  • The induced electric field generated by a time-varying B is non-conservative — its line integral around a closed loop equals −dΦ_B/dt, not zero. Hence one cannot define a single-valued potential for an induced field; this is the conceptual fork from electrostatics (NCERT §6.6, p. 163).
  • For a stationary loop and a time-varying field, the flux change drives the emf via the induced E-field; for a moving loop in a static field, the flux change is geometric and the emf is the motional Blv computed via the Lorentz force. Both pictures give identical numerical answers, illustrating the elegance of Faraday's law (NCERT §6.6, p. 162-163).

2.2 Definitions to memorise

Term Definition Page
Electromagnetic induction The phenomenon in which electric current (emf) is generated in a circuit by a changing magnetic flux through it. 154
Magnetic flux (Φ_B) Φ_B = B·A = BA cos θ for a uniform field over a plane area A; SI unit weber (Wb) = T·m²; a scalar quantity. 156-157
Faraday's law of induction The induced emf equals the (negative) time rate of change of magnetic flux: ε = −dΦ_B/dt; for N turns, ε = −N dΦ_B/dt. 157-158
Lenz's law The polarity of the induced emf is such that the induced current opposes the change in magnetic flux that produced it. 160
Motional emf The emf Blv induced across a rod of length l moving with velocity v perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field B. 162
Mutual inductance (M) Constant of proportionality between flux linkage in one coil and the current in a neighbouring coil: N1Φ1 = M12 I2; ε1 = −M dI2/dt. 165-167
Self-inductance (L) Constant of proportionality between flux linkage and current in the same coil: NΦ_B = LI; ε = −L dI/dt. 168
Henry (H) SI unit of inductance; 1 H gives 1 V of emf for a current changing at 1 A s⁻¹. 165
Back emf The self-induced emf in a coil, so called because it opposes the change in current that produces it. 168
AC generator A device that converts mechanical energy into electrical energy by rotating a coil in a uniform magnetic field, producing ε = NBAω sin ωt. 170-172
Weber (Wb) SI unit of magnetic flux; 1 Wb = 1 T·m². 157
Flux linkage Product NΦ_B of number of turns and flux through one turn. 157, 165
Induced current Current flowing in a closed circuit as a result of induced emf. 154
Induced electric field Non-conservative electric field set up by a time-varying magnetic field; drives the induced current. 163
Magnetic energy density u_B = B²/(2μ₀); energy per unit volume stored in a magnetic field. 170
Energy stored in inductor W = ½ L I². 168-170
Coaxial solenoids Two long solenoids on the same axis, used to compute mutual inductance. 166
Lenz–energy argument Statement that the negative sign in ε = −dΦ/dt is enforced by energy conservation. 160
Frequency of AC generator ν = ω/(2π); 50 Hz in India, 60 Hz in the USA. 172

2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember

  • Figure 6.1: bar magnet pushed towards a coil C1 connected to galvanometer G — galvanometer pointer deflects only while the magnet moves (NCERT p. 155).
  • Figure 6.2: coil C2 carrying steady current, moved relative to coil C1 — galvanometer in C1 deflects (NCERT p. 156).
  • Figure 6.3: two stationary coils C1 and C2; tapping key K in C2 — momentary deflection in C1 on press and again (opposite direction) on release (NCERT p. 156).
  • Figure 6.4: a plane area A in a uniform magnetic field B, used to define Φ_B = B·A (NCERT p. 157).
  • Figure 6.5: non-uniform field over a curved/divided surface, with area-element vectors dA_i — basis for Φ_B = Σ B_i · dA_i (NCERT p. 157).
  • Figure 6.6 (a, b): induced-current direction illustrations for Lenz's law with bar magnet approaching/receding from a coil (NCERT p. 160).
  • Figure 6.7 / Figure 6.8: planar loops of various shapes moving into/out of a field region — used to argue when induced emf is constant (rectangular) vs varying (circular) (NCERT p. 161-162).
  • Figure 6.10: rectangular conductor PQRS with movable arm PQ — geometric setup for motional emf Blv (NCERT p. 162).
  • Figure 6.11: rotating rod hinged at the centre of a metallic ring — setup for ε = BωR²/2 (NCERT p. 164).
  • Figure 6.12: two long coaxial solenoids of common length l — geometry from which M = μ0 n1 n2 π r1² l is derived (NCERT p. 166).
  • Figure 6.13 / 6.14: schematic of an AC generator and the resulting sinusoidal emf vs time (NCERT p. 170-172).

2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points

  • "Strong magnet near a stationary coil" — students often expect current. NCERT Example 6.5(a) is explicit: however strong the magnet, no flux change ⇒ no induced current (NCERT p. 162).
  • Confusing changing electric flux with changing magnetic flux — Example 6.5(b) hammers home that a loop moving through a static electric field between capacitor plates does NOT have an induced current; only changing magnetic flux induces emf in this chapter (NCERT p. 162).
  • "Number of spokes matters" trap — for a rotating wheel, all spokes are emf sources in parallel, so their number does not affect the emf between axle and rim (NCERT Example 6.7, p. 165).
  • Misremembering the area-vector angle — flux is BA cos θ, where θ is the angle between B and the area-vector normal, not between B and the plane of the coil. NCERT Example 6.2 sets up a 45° case to test exactly this (NCERT p. 158-159).
  • For the rotating rod, the right formula is ε = BωR²/2 (not BωR² and not BωR), traceable to integrating dε = Bω r dr from 0 to R (NCERT p. 164).
  • For the long solenoid, L = μ0 n² A l (where n is turns per unit length and A is cross-section), often confused with formulas using N (total turns) — be careful which the question gives (NCERT p. 168).
  • Lenz's law is not an independent postulate that overrides Faraday's law — it is the physical content of the negative sign and is enforced by conservation of energy (NCERT p. 160).
  • Forgetting the factor of N for multi-turn coils: ε = −N dΦ/dt — neglecting N gives an emf low by exactly the number of turns. Likewise self-inductance L scales as n², not n.
  • Sign of motional emf direction: students get the magnitude Blv right but confuse polarity. Use Lenz: the induced current must oppose the change in flux through the circuit; the resulting magnetic force on the rod is opposite to v (a drag force consistent with energy conservation).
  • M = M₁₂ = M₂₁ even when the two coils have very different sizes; the reciprocity follows from energy conservation, even though direct calculation in one direction may be hard.
  • Wrong direction of induced E-field: the induced E-field circles the changing flux, with sense given by the right-hand rule applied to −dB/dt (not dB/dt).
  • Misapplying ε = Blv when v is parallel to l: the formula requires v perpendicular to both l and B. If the rod slides along its own length, no emf is induced.

2.5 Key formulas table

Quantity Symbol / Formula NCERT reference
Magnetic flux Φ_B = B·A = BA cos θ §6.3, Eq. 6.1, p. 156
Flux linkage NΦ_B §6.4, p. 157
Faraday's law (single loop) ε = −dΦ_B/dt §6.4, Eq. 6.3, p. 158
Faraday's law (N turns) ε = −N dΦ_B/dt §6.4, Eq. 6.4, p. 158
Motional emf ε = Blv §6.6, Eq. 6.5, p. 162
Rotating rod emf ε = BωR²/2 §6.6, Ex. 6.6, p. 164
Mutual inductance (coaxial solenoids) M = μ₀ n₁ n₂ π r₁² l §6.7.1, Eq. 6.9, p. 166
Mutual-induction emf ε₁ = −M dI₂/dt §6.7.1, p. 167
Self-inductance (definition) NΦ_B = LI §6.7.2, p. 168
Self-inductance of solenoid L = μ₀ n² A l §6.7.2, Eq. 6.15, p. 168
Back emf ε = −L dI/dt §6.7.2, Eq. 6.14, p. 168
Energy stored in inductor W = ½ L I² §6.7.2, p. 170
Magnetic energy density u_B = B²/(2μ₀) §6.7.2, p. 170
AC generator emf ε = NBAω sin ωt = ε₀ sin ωt §6.8, Eq. 6.19, p. 171
Peak emf (AC gen.) ε₀ = NBAω §6.8, p. 171
Coupled coils total emf (coil 1) ε₁ = −L₁ dI₁/dt − M dI₂/dt §6.7.2, p. 169
Reciprocity M₁₂ = M₂₁ = M §6.7.1, p. 167
SI unit of flux weber Wb = T·m² = V·s §6.3, p. 157
SI unit of inductance henry H = V·s·A⁻¹ = Wb·A⁻¹ §6.7, p. 165
Indian / USA mains frequency 50 Hz / 60 Hz §6.8, p. 172

🎯 Practice MCQs

First 3 questions free · create a free account to unlock the rest — answers & explanations included, no payment needed

Q1. The SI unit of magnetic flux is the weber, which is equivalent to:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

By definition Φ_B = B·A, so the unit is tesla times area, i.e. T·m². Option (A) would correspond to a line integral of B, not flux.

Q2. Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction states that the induced emf in a closed circuit is equal to:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

NCERT states explicitly that the magnitude of induced emf equals the time rate of change of flux, with the negative sign indicating the direction (Lenz). (A) confuses flux with rate of change of flux.

Q3. According to Lenz's law, the polarity of the induced emf is such that it tends to produce a current which:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

Lenz's law is the verbal statement of the negative sign in Faraday's law and is required by conservation of energy. (A) would allow a perpetual-motion machine, as NCERT discusses.

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