Posted February 08, 2015
I have "built" a couple of primitive electric motors working on the same principle as the first one by Faraday (as seen in many youtube videos). The thing is that I don't really understand how they work. I know intuitively that substituting a magnet for the wire won't work because that would break physic (by creating perpetual motion) but I can't say I really understand why or why not since the direct current going through the wire simply create a magnetic field.
I understand how conventional electrical motor works since they are simply about attraction and repulsion of magnetic poles but Faraday's motor does not work that way. It works using something called the Lorentz force. I've read a couple of explanation of it but I don't understand them. I have the feeling (that maybe wrong) that this might lead to me understanding radio waves and what make them different from induction.
I know from experience that not understanding an explanation does not mean I won't understand all explanations.
Please don't link to the Lorentz Force article on Wikipedia as it is one of the explanations I do not understand.
I understand how conventional electrical motor works since they are simply about attraction and repulsion of magnetic poles but Faraday's motor does not work that way. It works using something called the Lorentz force. I've read a couple of explanation of it but I don't understand them. I have the feeling (that maybe wrong) that this might lead to me understanding radio waves and what make them different from induction.
I know from experience that not understanding an explanation does not mean I won't understand all explanations.
Please don't link to the Lorentz Force article on Wikipedia as it is one of the explanations I do not understand.
This question / problem has been solved by jdsgn