MedVision ad

Levitation (1 Viewer)

Haku

Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2004
Messages
779
For a MC question asking u
"why does a magnet float on a superconductor cooled below its critical temp".

i tossed between this two option
1. Current induced in the conductor oppose the external magnetic field.
2. superconductors excludes magnetic field.

from what i read 1 is obviously more correct. But the answer says 2.

Could someone help.
 

香港!

Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2005
Messages
467
Location
asdasdas
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2010
nosadness said:
For a MC question asking u
"why does a magnet float on a superconductor cooled below its critical temp".

i tossed between this two option
1. Current induced in the conductor oppose the external magnetic field.
2. superconductors excludes magnetic field.

from what i read 1 is obviously more correct. But the answer says 2.

Could someone help.
Hi... 1 says the Current induced opposes the external field... but shouldn't it be the opposing magnetic field produced by that current that makes the magnet hover??
 

speed2

Member
Joined
Sep 28, 2004
Messages
209
Location
?
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
香港! said:
Hi... 1 says the Current induced opposes the external field... but shouldn't it be the opposing magnetic field produced by that current that makes the magnet hover??
yeah it is the interaction of the two fileds that makes the magnet hover
 

Haku

Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2004
Messages
779
no, cause a magnet brought near a superconductor would induce a current that would oppose the original movement of the magnet. In this case the magnet (lets say north) is trying to move down, so the induced current would create a field that oppose the external field and exactly cancell out so there is no net field. Isn;t that right?

cause i know that superconductors excludes Bfield but choice 1 describes how it does it, as the above states.
 

Xenocide

Member
Joined
May 4, 2005
Messages
47
Location
Sydney
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2005
You are correct nosadness.

As a side note, only superconductors exhibit this effect (to this extent) as no current is lost due to resistance and hence the induced current/magnetic field is exactly equal to that which created it.
 

Haku

Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2004
Messages
779
so is the stupid MC answer wrong which caused me so much confusion?
 

serge

Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2004
Messages
635
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
nosadness said:
i know that superconductors excludes Bfield
ON ANOTHER TOPIC- superconductors exclude magnetic fields until the magnetic field is so strong that the superconducting properties stop... hence the magnet stops hoveirng
and falls
 

香港!

Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2005
Messages
467
Location
asdasdas
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2010
nosadness said:
no, cause a magnet brought near a superconductor would induce a current that would oppose the original movement of the magnet. In this case the magnet (lets say north) is trying to move down, so the induced current would create a field that oppose the external field and exactly cancell out so there is no net field. Isn;t that right?

cause i know that superconductors excludes Bfield but choice 1 describes how it does it, as the above states.
"so the induced current would create a field that oppose the external field and exactly cancell out so there is no net field. Isn;t that right?"
Exactly right!!
But look at your option number 1: "1. Current induced in the conductor oppose the external magnetic field."
As I said before, this option 1 doesn't say that the Magnetic Field induced by that current opposes the external magnetic field... It just says the current opposes the external magnetic field... Not like what YOU said as well, where the "induced current would create a field that oppose the external field"
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top