- #1
Wannabeagenius
- 91
- 0
Hi All,
I'm reading about special relativity but I'm having a very difficult time trying to understand what the author is saying.
Imagine a very large magnet mounted by railroad tracks such that a moving train passes through it. On a moving train is a loop of wire. Now as train passes through the magnet, a current is induced in the wire.
Apparently their is a difference if you are observing this loop from the ground or from the train but I don't see the difference. A loop is moving through a magnetic field and an emf gets generated. From anybody's point of view, the time rate of change of magnetic flux through the coil is changing.
Please tell me what I am missing?
Thank you,
Bob
I'm reading about special relativity but I'm having a very difficult time trying to understand what the author is saying.
Imagine a very large magnet mounted by railroad tracks such that a moving train passes through it. On a moving train is a loop of wire. Now as train passes through the magnet, a current is induced in the wire.
Apparently their is a difference if you are observing this loop from the ground or from the train but I don't see the difference. A loop is moving through a magnetic field and an emf gets generated. From anybody's point of view, the time rate of change of magnetic flux through the coil is changing.
Please tell me what I am missing?
Thank you,
Bob