Starter track
Step 2 of 30 / 3 completeMagnetism
Earlier steps still set up Faraday's Law and Lenz's Law.
Previous step: Magnetic Fields.
Concept module
Track one magnet passing one coil and see how changing magnetic flux linkage creates induced emf while Lenz's law fixes the response direction, with the stage, galvanometer, and graphs all driven by the same bounded motion.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 2 of 30 / 3 completeEarlier steps still set up Faraday's Law and Lenz's Law.
Previous step: Magnetic Fields.
Why it behaves this way
Faraday's law is the bridge moment where magnetism stops being just a field pattern and starts becoming a source of electrical response. A magnetic field through a loop is not enough by itself. The loop only develops an emf when the magnetic flux through that loop changes, and Lenz's law fixes the sign so the induced effect opposes the change that produced it.
This module keeps one compact moving-magnet-and-coil picture in charge. One bar magnet passes one coil on one shared axis. The same magnet position, speed, pole orientation, coil turns, and coil area determine the stage, the galvanometer, the current arrows, the flux graph, the induced-response graph, the worked examples, the prediction prompts, the checkpoint challenge, and the quick test, so the Faraday/Lenz story stays tied to one honest changing setup instead of turning into a detached formula rule.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans1.4 T
120 turns
1 m^2
1.2 m/s
-2.6 m
1. Read the live magnet pass
2. Evaluate the signed field through the coil
3. Build the linked flux
4. Turn changing flux into emf and current
Induction state
Flux-change checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
If the magnetic field through the coil is large, the induced emf must also be large.
A large field can produce a large flux, but induction depends on the rate of change of flux. A flat flux curve gives zero emf even at a strong-field moment.
That is why the induced-response graph crosses zero when the magnet is centered in a symmetric pass: the flux is momentarily at an extremum, so its slope is zero there.
Quick test
Reasoning
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one circular coil fixed at the center of the stage and one bar magnet sliding horizontally past it. A field band marks the signed magnetic field through the coil, a galvanometer card reports induced emf and current, and optional arrows show the loop-current direction when the response is not zero.
A live readout lists time, magnet position, field through the coil, flux-change rate, induced emf, and current. The same shared pass also drives the graphs, so hovering the time-based plots previews the corresponding moment on the stage.
Graph summary
The first graph compares the field through the coil with the linked flux. The second graph compares induced emf with loop current over the same time axis.
The key accessibility takeaway is that the response graph depends on how quickly the linked flux changes, not on whether the field or flux itself is merely large at one instant.
Keep the electricity-magnetism story moving
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
See what each Maxwell equation says physically, how sources and circulation differ, and why changing electric and magnetic fields together unify electricity, magnetism, and light.
See how changing electric and magnetic fields travel together as one rightward wave, with the local field pair, source-to-probe delay, and propagation cue all tied to the same compact live stage.
Launch one moving charge through a uniform magnetic field, compare it with a same-direction current segment, and connect force direction, curvature, and current-based force on one bounded live stage.