Motional EMF and Eddy Currents | EMI Physics Notes

Motional EMF And Eddy Currents

Study EMF generated by motion of conductors and the applications of eddy currents with correct vector directions, derivations, SVG diagrams, numerical problems and exam-oriented questions.

Motional EMFMotional EMF FormulaSliding Rod ProblemsVelocity Dependent EMFEddy CurrentsMagnetic BrakingEnergy LossesNumerical ProblemsPYQs
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1. Introduction to Motional EMF

Motional EMF is the potential difference produced across a conductor when the conductor moves through a magnetic field and cuts magnetic field lines. Free charges inside the conductor experience magnetic Lorentz force. This force separates positive and negative charges until an internal electric field is formed. At equilibrium, the electric force balances the magnetic force.

Physical Meaning

A moving conductor in a magnetic field behaves like a temporary source of EMF. If the circuit is closed, current flows. If it is open, charge separation still creates a potential difference.

Where It Appears

Sliding rods, moving train axles, rotating discs, aircraft wings, generators, magnetic braking and many NEET/JEE numerical problems use motional EMF.

Correct motional EMF mechanism: v to the right, B into the page, positive charge force upward
×××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××× rod length l + + velocity v force on + charge electric field E downward Here B is into the page. For positive charges, q(v × B) is upward, so the top of the rod becomes positive and the bottom becomes negative.

2. Derivation from Lorentz Force

Symbols

B = magnetic field, l = length of conductor, v = speed, θ = angle between velocity and magnetic field, ε = induced EMF.

Magnetic force on chargeF = q(v × B)
MagnitudeF = qvB sinθ
1

Magnetic force pushes charges along the rod and creates charge separation.

2

The separated charges produce electric field E inside the rod.

3

At equilibrium, electric force balances magnetic force: qE = qvB sinθ.

4

Therefore E = vB sinθ.

5

Potential difference across length l is ε = El.

Final Resultε = Blv sinθFor perpendicular motion, ε = Blv.

3. Derivation Using Faraday's Law

Sliding rod on rails: induced current is counterclockwise and magnetic force opposes motion
×××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××× R v Fmag Rod current is upward; the circuit current is counterclockwise. The magnetic force on the rod is leftward, opposing the rightward motion. top positivebottom negative
Faraday's Lawε = −dΦ/dt
Flux through sliding rectangleΦ = BA = B(lx)
1

Let the sliding rod be at distance x from the fixed resistor side.

2

Area enclosed by the circuit is A = lx.

3

Flux is Φ = Blx.

4

Differentiate: |ε| = d(Blx)/dt = Bl(dx/dt).

5

Since dx/dt = v, the induced EMF is ε = Blv.

Sliding Rod Formulaε = Blv

4. Velocity Dependent EMF

For fixed magnetic field, rod length and angle, motional EMF increases linearly with speed. This is why fast motion of magnets, rods, train axles or aircraft wings produces larger induced voltage.

Velocity dependent EMF graph
v ε slope = Bl sinθ For fixed B, l and θ, ε is directly proportional to speed.
Straight-line relationε = (Bl sinθ)v

5. Sliding Rod Problems

EMFε = Blv
CurrentI = Blv/R
Opposing ForceF = BIl = B²l²v/R
Mechanical PowerP = Fv = B²l²v²/R
Joule PowerP = I²R
Energy ConservationPmech = Pelec

The rod is not pushed freely forever. Once current flows, the current carrying rod experiences magnetic force opposite the motion. External work is therefore needed to maintain constant speed.

6. Eddy Currents

Eddy currents are circulating currents induced inside a bulk conductor when magnetic flux through the conductor changes. They are not single-line currents like ordinary circuit currents; they form closed loops inside the body of the conductor.

Eddy currents in a conducting plate when magnetic flux changes
×××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××××× Example shown: external B into page is increasing. Eddy currents are counterclockwise so their induced field is out of the page and opposes the increase.

Useful Effects

Magnetic braking, induction furnace, speedometer damping, energy meters, metal detectors and electromagnetic damping use eddy currents.

Harmful Effects

Transformer cores and motor cores can heat up due to eddy current loss. This reduces efficiency unless the core is laminated.

7. Eddy Current Energy Losses and Reduction

Whenever eddy currents flow in a conductor of resistance, electrical energy is dissipated as heat. In transformer cores this is an unwanted core loss, along with hysteresis loss.

Reducing eddy current loss by lamination
solid core: large eddy loops laminated core: small loops, less loss

Why Lamination Works

Thin insulated sheets break large current loops into small loops. This reduces current and heat loss.

Why Ferrites Help

Ferrites have high resistivity, so eddy currents are weak. They are used in high-frequency transformer cores.

8. Applications of Eddy Currents

Magnetic braking: eddy currents oppose wheel motion
eddy loops N S braking force No contact is needed. Eddy currents dissipate kinetic energy as heat and oppose motion.

Magnetic Brakes

Non-contact braking in trains and rides; eddy current force opposes motion.

Induction Furnace

Large eddy currents heat metal quickly for melting.

Speedometer

Eddy current torque helps indicate speed.

Energy Meter

Rotating aluminium disc develops eddy currents.

Damping

Moving coil galvanometers use electromagnetic damping.

Metal Detector

Changing magnetic field induces eddy currents in hidden metal.

9. Numericals

These are written in the same examination style as the supplied pages, with full working so students understand the process instead of only memorising the answer.

12

Question 12

If a 10 m long metallic bar moves in a direction at right angle to the magnetic field with a speed of 5.0 m s^-1, 25 V emf is induced in it. Find the value of magnetic field intensity.

Given: l = 10 m, v = 5.0 m s^-1, ε = 25 V, θ = 90°.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: For a straight conductor moving normally to the field, ε = Blv. Therefore B = ε/(lv) = 25/(10 × 5.0) = 0.5 T.

Answer: 0.5 T
13

Question 13

A metre gauge train is running due north with a constant speed of 90 km h^-1 on a horizontal track. If the vertical component of earth's magnetic field is 3 × 10^-5 Wb m^-2, calculate the emf induced across the axle of the train of length 1.25 m.

Given: v = 90 km h^-1 = 25 m s^-1, Bv = 3 × 10^-5 T, l = 1.25 m.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: The axle cuts the vertical component of earth's magnetic field. ε = Blv = (3 × 10^-5)(1.25)(25) = 9.375 × 10^-4 V.

Answer: 9.375 × 10^-4 V
14

Question 14

A railway track running N-S has two parallel rails 1.0 m apart. Calculate the induced emf between the rails when a train passes at 90 km h^-1. Horizontal component of earth's field is 0.3 × 10^-4 Wb m^-2 and angle of dip is 60°.

Given: H = 0.3 × 10^-4 T, δ = 60°, l = 1.0 m, v = 90 km h^-1 = 25 m s^-1.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: For a train moving along a north-south track, the relevant component through the axle is the vertical component Bv = H tanδ = 0.3 × 10^-4 × √3 = 5.196 × 10^-5 T. Hence ε = Bv l v = (5.196 × 10^-5)(1)(25) = 1.30 × 10^-3 V.

Answer: 1.3 × 10^-3 V
15

Question 15

A wire of length 0.1 m moves with a speed of 10 m s^-1 perpendicular to a magnetic field of induction 1 Wb m^-2. Calculate induced emf.

Given: l = 0.1 m, v = 10 m s^-1, B = 1 T.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: ε = Blv = 1 × 0.1 × 10 = 1 V.

Answer: 1 V
16

Question 16

A straight conductor one metre long moves at right angles to both its length and a uniform magnetic field. If the speed is 2.0 m s^-1 and magnetic field strength is 10^4 gauss, find induced emf in volt.

Given: l = 1 m, v = 2.0 m s^-1, B = 10^4 gauss = 1 T.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: Since 10^4 gauss = 1 tesla, ε = Blv = 1 × 1 × 2 = 2 V.

Answer: 2 V
17

Question 17

Two rails of a railway track insulated from each other and the ground are connected to a millivoltmeter. Find the reading when a train travels at 180 km h^-1. The vertical component of earth's field is 2 × 10^-5 Wb m^-2 and rails are separated by 1 m.

Given: v = 180 km h^-1 = 50 m s^-1, Bv = 2 × 10^-5 T, l = 1 m.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: ε = Blv = (2 × 10^-5)(1)(50) = 1 × 10^-3 V = 1 mV.

Answer: 1 mV
18

Question 18

The distance between the edges of the wings of an aeroplane is 30 m. It is landing down with a velocity of 300 km h^-1. If the wings are east-west, find the potential difference between the edges. What happens if the wings are along north-south? Take H = 0.4 gauss.

Given: l = 30 m, v = 300 km h^-1 = 83.33 m s^-1, H = 0.4 gauss = 4 × 10^-5 T.

Formula: ε = Blv sinθ. For perpendicular cutting, ε = Blv.

Solution: When the wings are east-west, their length is perpendicular to v × B, so ε = Blv = (4 × 10^-5)(30)(83.33) = 0.1 V. If wings are north-south, the wing length is along the horizontal field direction and the potential difference between edges becomes zero.

Answer: 0.1 V; zero for north-south wings

10. NEET MCQs on Motional EMF and Eddy Currents

NEET-1A rod of length 0.5 m moves at 4 m/s perpendicular to a 0.25 T field. The induced emf is
  1. A) 0.25 V
  2. B) 0.5 V
  3. C) 1.0 V
  4. D) 2.0 V

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Motional EMF

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

ε = Blv = 0.25 × 0.5 × 4 = 0.5 V.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-2A coil is removed from a uniform magnetic field. The induced current direction is given primarily by
  1. A) Coulomb's law
  2. B) Lenz law
  3. C) Gauss law
  4. D) Ampere law

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Lenz Law

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

The current direction is such that it opposes the decrease in flux.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-3If the speed of a conductor is doubled, induced emf becomes
  1. A) half
  2. B) double
  3. C) four times
  4. D) zero

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Velocity dependence

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

For fixed B, l and angle, ε ∝ v.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-4A conducting plate moving between magnetic poles is slowed mainly due to
  1. A) static friction
  2. B) eddy currents
  3. C) capacitance
  4. D) thermal expansion

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Eddy currents

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Eddy currents produce magnetic effects opposing motion.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-5Laminating transformer cores reduces
  1. A) hysteresis only
  2. B) eddy current loss
  3. C) magnetic flux completely
  4. D) frequency

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Eddy loss reduction

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Lamination reduces loop area and increases resistance for eddy paths.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-6For a rod moving parallel to magnetic field, motional emf is
  1. A) Blv
  2. B) 2Blv
  3. C) zero
  4. D) Bl/v

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Angle factor

Correct Answer: C
Detailed Explanation:

ε = Blv sinθ and θ = 0°.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-7A wire of length 2 m moving at 3 m/s in 0.1 T field produces 0.3 V. The angle between v and B is
  1. A) 30°
  2. B) 45°
  3. C) 60°
  4. D) 90°

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Angle in motional EMF

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

0.3 = 0.1 × 2 × 3 × sinθ, so sinθ = 0.5.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-8In a closed sliding rod circuit, magnetic force on rod is
  1. A) along velocity
  2. B) opposite velocity
  3. C) always upward
  4. D) zero

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Magnetic braking

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

By Lenz law the force opposes the motion producing current.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-9The SI unit of magnetic flux is
  1. A) tesla
  2. B) weber
  3. C) henry
  4. D) volt

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Flux

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Magnetic flux is measured in weber.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-10If flux through a loop changes from 0.2 Wb to 0.5 Wb in 0.1 s, average emf magnitude is
  1. A) 0.3 V
  2. B) 3 V
  3. C) 5 V
  4. D) 30 V

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Faraday law

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

ε = ΔΦ/Δt = 0.3/0.1 = 3 V.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-11An open moving rod can have
  1. A) current but no emf
  2. B) emf but no current
  3. C) neither emf nor charge separation
  4. D) only heat

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Open circuit

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Charge separation creates emf, but open circuit prevents current.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-12The direction of induced current in a conductor moving in magnetic field can be found by
  1. A) Fleming's left hand rule
  2. B) Fleming's right hand rule
  3. C) right hand thumb rule only
  4. D) Kirchhoff rule

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Direction rule

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Generator direction uses Fleming's right hand rule.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-13Eddy current heating is useful in
  1. A) induction furnace
  2. B) ideal transformer core
  3. C) perfect insulator
  4. D) static compass

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Application

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

Induction furnaces use eddy current heating.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-14A 100-turn coil has flux per turn changing at 0.02 Wb/s. EMF is
  1. A) 0.02 V
  2. B) 2 V
  3. C) 5 V
  4. D) 100 V

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Flux linkage

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

ε = N dΦ/dt = 100 × 0.02 = 2 V.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-15In magnetic braking, kinetic energy is converted mainly into
  1. A) chemical energy
  2. B) heat
  3. C) sound only
  4. D) light only

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Energy conversion

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

Eddy currents dissipate energy as heat.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-16A rod has ε = 12 V in R = 6 Ω. Current is
  1. A) 1 A
  2. B) 2 A
  3. C) 6 A
  4. D) 72 A

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Ohm law with EMI

Correct Answer: B
Detailed Explanation:

I = ε/R = 12/6 = 2 A.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-17If B is into the page and rod moves right, force on positive charges is
  1. A) up
  2. B) down
  3. C) left
  4. D) right

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Vector product

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

v × B points upward.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-18A solid copper block in changing B develops stronger eddy currents than a laminated block because it has
  1. A) larger current paths
  2. B) zero conductivity
  3. C) less area
  4. D) no electrons

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Eddy paths

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

Large loops and low resistance produce strong eddy currents.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-19A loop entering a magnetic field has induced current because
  1. A) area inside field changes
  2. B) mass changes
  3. C) charge changes permanently
  4. D) resistance becomes zero

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Loop entering field

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

Flux changes due to changing area inside B.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-20If field is normal to a loop and area doubles in 2 s, flux change rate is
  1. A) B A/s
  2. B) 2BA/s
  3. C) BA/2s
  4. D) zero

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Flux change

Correct Answer: C
Detailed Explanation:

If area changes from A to 2A, ΔΦ = BA over 2 s.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-21A train axle emf depends on
  1. A) axle length, speed and earth field component
  2. B) train color
  3. C) wheel mass only
  4. D) fuel

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Train axle

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

ε = Blv for the relevant earth field component.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-22Motional emf is maximum when v and B are
  1. A) parallel
  2. B) antiparallel
  3. C) perpendicular
  4. D) zero

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Maximum EMF

Correct Answer: C
Detailed Explanation:

sinθ is maximum at 90°.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-23Induced current in a closed loop is zero if
  1. A) flux is constant
  2. B) resistance is finite
  3. C) field exists
  4. D) wire is copper

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Faraday law

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

Only changing flux induces current.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-24In eddy current damping, the damping force is
  1. A) non-contact
  2. B) always zero
  3. C) gravitational
  4. D) electrostatic only

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Damping

Correct Answer: A
Detailed Explanation:

It is a magnetic non-contact damping effect.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.
NEET-25The formula q = ΔΦ/R is valid for total charge in a circuit when
  1. A) resistance is R
  2. B) flux changes by ΔΦ
  3. C) both A and B
  4. D) no current flows

Difficulty: NEET

Concept Tested: Charge by EMI

Correct Answer: C
Detailed Explanation:

Integrating I = ε/R = -(1/R)dΦ/dt gives q = ΔΦ/R in magnitude.

Shortcut: Use the most direct formula after checking geometry.
Common Student Mistake: Do not ignore direction or angle.

11. JEE Main Problems

JEE Main-1A rod of length l slides with speed v on rails of resistance R in uniform B. External force required for constant speed is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: B²l²v/R
Detailed Explanation:

ε = Blv, I = Blv/R, magnetic opposing force F = BIl = B²l²v/R.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-2For the same rod circuit, mechanical power supplied is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: B²l²v²/R
Detailed Explanation:

P = Fv = (B²l²v/R)v = B²l²v²/R = I²R.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-3A circular loop of radius a is pulled out of a uniform field at constant speed. During partial exit, induced current direction is decided by

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: opposition to decrease of flux
Detailed Explanation:

The loop tries to maintain flux in the original direction; current direction follows right-hand rule.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-4A conducting rod rotates about one end in a uniform magnetic field perpendicular to the plane. Induced emf between centre and rim is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: ½BωL²
Detailed Explanation:

Integrate dε = Bωx dx from 0 to L.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-5A disc of radius R rotates with angular speed ω in perpendicular B. EMF between centre and rim is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: ½BωR²
Detailed Explanation:

A rotating disc is treated as many radial rods.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-6A loop has resistance R and flux changes by ΔΦ. Total charge passed is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: ΔΦ/R
Detailed Explanation:

q = ∫I dt = (1/R)∫ε dt = ΔΦ/R in magnitude.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-7A square loop enters a region of uniform B with speed v. Current is non-zero only when

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: entering or leaving
Detailed Explanation:

When the loop is fully inside, flux is constant.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-8A rod of length L moves at angle θ with B. If its length is perpendicular to velocity, emf is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: BLv sinθ
Detailed Explanation:

The magnetic force depends on component of v perpendicular to B.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-9A conductor moving in B has no emf when

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: v is parallel to B or effective length is parallel to v × B incorrectly zero projection
Detailed Explanation:

Motional emf is line integral of (v × B)·dl.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-10Eddy currents are reduced in transformer cores by

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: lamination
Detailed Explanation:

Thin insulated sheets reduce loop area and increase eddy path resistance.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-11A metal plate enters a magnetic field and slows down. The missing kinetic energy appears as

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: Joule heat
Detailed Explanation:

Eddy currents heat the metal.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-12A rectangular loop moves near a long wire carrying steady current. Induced current appears when

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: distance from the wire changes
Detailed Explanation:

Magnetic field of wire is non-uniform, so flux changes as distance changes.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-13If B doubles and v halves in motional emf, ε becomes

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: unchanged
Detailed Explanation:

ε ∝ Bv when l and angle are fixed.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-14A train moving north has emf across east-west axle due to

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: vertical component of earth's magnetic field
Detailed Explanation:

v × B_vertical points east-west along the axle.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-15When a rod moves right in B into page, upper end becomes

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: positive
Detailed Explanation:

Positive charges experience upward force.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-16A sliding rod circuit has current I. If resistance is halved, opposing force becomes

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: double
Detailed Explanation:

F = B²l²v/R.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-17A conducting frame moves completely inside a uniform B region. Net emf is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: zero
Detailed Explanation:

Motional emfs around complete closed path cancel because flux is constant.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-18In magnetic braking, force approximately increases with speed at low speeds because

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: eddy current is proportional to induced emf
Detailed Explanation:

ε ∝ v, I ∝ v, magnetic force ∝ I.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-19A coil of N turns is rotated by 180° in B. Flux change magnitude is

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: 2NBA
Detailed Explanation:

Initial flux +NBA and final -NBA, change = 2NBA.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.
JEE Main-20For a rod rotating about one end, why is the result not BLvL using end speed?

Difficulty: JEE Main

Concept Tested: Application and multi-step numerical

Correct Answer: speed varies along rod
Detailed Explanation:

Each element has different speed v = ωx, so integration is required.

Shortcut: Reduce the situation to flux rate or motional source.
Common Student Mistake: Avoid using Blv blindly without checking the effective length.

12. JEE Advanced Problems

JEE Adv-1A conducting rod slides on rails in B with a spring attached. Discuss equilibrium speed if pulled by constant force F0.

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Steady speed v = F0R/(B²l²)
Detailed Explanation:

At terminal speed magnetic drag equals external force: B²l²v/R = F0.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-2Two parallel rails are connected through two resistors on opposite ends and a rod moves between them. How is current divided?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: By inverse resistance in the two loops
Detailed Explanation:

The rod acts as source Blv; each closed path current depends on its total resistance.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-3A conducting loop enters a field B(x) = B0x/a. Is induced emf constant?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: No, it depends on position
Detailed Explanation:

Flux rate includes the spatial variation of B across the entering area.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-4A ring falls vertically through a horizontal magnetic field region. Explain force stages.

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Opposes entry and exit; zero when fully inside uniform region
Detailed Explanation:

Flux changes during entry and exit only.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-5A rod rotates about one end with non-uniform B = kr. Find emf.

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: kωL³/3
Detailed Explanation:

dε = B(r)ωr dr = kωr²dr; integrate 0 to L.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-6A square loop leaves a field with resistance R. Find impulse if flux changes by BA.

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: B l ΔΦ/R direction opposite motion for side length l
Detailed Explanation:

Impulse equals ∫BIl dt = (Bl/R)ΔΦ for the active side under ideal geometry.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-7A rotating disc has finite resistance between centre and rim. Why does current need an external circuit?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Charge separation alone gives emf; current requires closed path
Detailed Explanation:

Open circuit has potential difference but no sustained current.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-8A rod moves with acceleration in B. What is instantaneous power?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: B²l²v²/R
Detailed Explanation:

At each instant I = Blv/R and P = I²R.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-9A loop changes orientation and area simultaneously. General induced emf?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: |d(BA cosθ)/dt|
Detailed Explanation:

Differentiate flux with all time-dependent variables.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-10A plate moves between magnet poles. Why is the braking force not exactly constant?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Eddy current distribution changes with geometry, speed and temperature
Detailed Explanation:

Real plates have non-uniform currents and heating changes resistance.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-11A conducting bar moves diagonally across rails. Which component of velocity contributes?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: component perpendicular to the bar and field
Detailed Explanation:

Use line integral of v × B along the rod.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-12Two rods move on the same rails in opposite directions. Equivalent emf?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: algebraic sum depending on polarities
Detailed Explanation:

Each rod is a motional source; signs depend on v × B.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-13A loop in time-varying magnetic field has no conducting material. Is electric field induced?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Yes, non-conservative electric field exists
Detailed Explanation:

Faraday law describes induced electric field; current needs conductor.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-14Why are eddy currents not always circular in real bodies?

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Geometry and boundary conditions shape current paths
Detailed Explanation:

They form closed loops, but not necessarily perfect circles.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.
JEE Adv-15A magnetic brake becomes hot. Explain in terms of energy.

Difficulty: JEE Advanced

Concept Tested: Advanced EMI reasoning

Correct Answer: Mechanical work against magnetic drag becomes Joule heat
Detailed Explanation:

Lenz law creates opposition; current dissipates energy.

Shortcut: Use energy conservation, flux method or line integral as suitable.
Common Student Mistake: Do not treat non-uniform fields or rotating conductors as simple Blv cases.

13. IB, IGCSE, ICSE and A-Level Questions

IB-1Explain why the area under an emf-time graph gives change in flux linkage.

Difficulty: IB

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: Faraday law gives ε = -d(NΦ)/dt, so integrating emf over time gives the negative change in flux linkage.
Detailed Explanation:

Faraday law gives ε = -d(NΦ)/dt, so integrating emf over time gives the negative change in flux linkage.

IB-2A student rotates a coil faster. Describe the effect on maximum induced emf.

Difficulty: IB

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: Maximum emf increases because rate of change of flux increases.
Detailed Explanation:

Maximum emf increases because rate of change of flux increases.

IGCSE-3State two ways to increase induced voltage in a coil.

Difficulty: IGCSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: Move magnet faster, use more turns, use stronger magnet, or use an iron core.
Detailed Explanation:

Move magnet faster, use more turns, use stronger magnet, or use an iron core.

IGCSE-4Why is a transformer core laminated?

Difficulty: IGCSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: To reduce eddy current loss and heating.
Detailed Explanation:

To reduce eddy current loss and heating.

A-Level-5Derive the emf of a rod rotating in a perpendicular magnetic field.

Difficulty: A-Level

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: For an element dx at distance x, v = ωx and dε = Bωx dx. Integrating from 0 to L gives ε = ½BωL².
Detailed Explanation:

For an element dx at distance x, v = ωx and dε = Bωx dx. Integrating from 0 to L gives ε = ½BωL².

A-Level-6A loop falls into a magnetic field. Explain terminal motion qualitatively.

Difficulty: A-Level

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: Induced current produces upward magnetic force opposing motion; terminal speed occurs when magnetic drag balances weight.
Detailed Explanation:

Induced current produces upward magnetic force opposing motion; terminal speed occurs when magnetic drag balances weight.

ICSE-7Define motional emf.

Difficulty: ICSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: Motional emf is the emf induced between the ends of a conductor when it cuts magnetic field lines.
Detailed Explanation:

Motional emf is the emf induced between the ends of a conductor when it cuts magnetic field lines.

ICSE-8What is one harmful effect of eddy currents?

Difficulty: ICSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: They cause unwanted heating and energy loss in transformer cores.
Detailed Explanation:

They cause unwanted heating and energy loss in transformer cores.

CBSE-9Why does Lenz law represent conservation of energy?

Difficulty: CBSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: If induced current aided the change, energy would be created without external work; opposition requires work input.
Detailed Explanation:

If induced current aided the change, energy would be created without external work; opposition requires work input.

CBSE-10Write the formula for emf induced in a conductor moving at angle θ.

Difficulty: CBSE

Concept Tested: Curriculum-specific EMI understanding

Correct Answer: ε = Blv sinθ.
Detailed Explanation:

ε = Blv sinθ.

14. Case Studies

Case-1Train axle voltage: A train moves due north at 72 km/h. Axle length is 1.5 m and vertical earth field is 4 × 10^-5 T. Find the induced voltage and identify why vertical field matters.

Difficulty: Case Study

Concept Tested: Train axle voltage

Correct Answer: v = 20 m/s. ε = Blv = 4 × 10^-5 × 1.5 × 20 = 1.2 × 10^-3 V. Vertical field with northward velocity gives emf across east-west axle.
Detailed Explanation:

v = 20 m/s. ε = Blv = 4 × 10^-5 × 1.5 × 20 = 1.2 × 10^-3 V. Vertical field with northward velocity gives emf across east-west axle.

Case-2Sliding rod brake: A 0.4 m rod moves at 5 m/s in 0.5 T field on rails with total resistance 2 Ω. Find ε, I and opposing force.

Difficulty: Case Study

Concept Tested: Sliding rod brake

Correct Answer: ε = 1 V, I = 0.5 A, F = BIl = 0.5 × 0.5 × 0.4 = 0.1 N opposite motion.
Detailed Explanation:

ε = 1 V, I = 0.5 A, F = BIl = 0.5 × 0.5 × 0.4 = 0.1 N opposite motion.

Case-3Rotating disc generator: A disc of radius 0.2 m rotates at 100 rad/s in 0.3 T. Find emf between centre and rim.

Difficulty: Case Study

Concept Tested: Rotating disc generator

Correct Answer: ε = ½BωR² = 0.5 × 0.3 × 100 × 0.04 = 0.6 V.
Detailed Explanation:

ε = ½BωR² = 0.5 × 0.3 × 100 × 0.04 = 0.6 V.

Case-4Induction furnace: A metal piece is placed in a rapidly changing magnetic field. Explain heating.

Difficulty: Case Study

Concept Tested: Induction furnace

Correct Answer: Changing flux induces eddy currents in the metal. The metal's resistance converts electrical energy into heat.
Detailed Explanation:

Changing flux induces eddy currents in the metal. The metal's resistance converts electrical energy into heat.

Case-5Laminated transformer core: A transformer core is made from insulated thin sheets. Explain why efficiency improves.

Difficulty: Case Study

Concept Tested: Laminated transformer core

Correct Answer: Lamination reduces eddy current loop area and increases path resistance, reducing I²R heating loss.
Detailed Explanation:

Lamination reduces eddy current loop area and increases path resistance, reducing I²R heating loss.

15. Common Student Errors

Mistake 1

Using ε = Blv even when velocity is parallel to magnetic field.

Mistake 2

Forgetting the angle factor sinθ.

Mistake 3

Using kilometres per hour without converting to metre per second.

Mistake 4

Forgetting gauss to tesla conversion: 10^4 gauss = 1 tesla.

Mistake 5

Writing train axle emf without choosing the correct earth-field component.

Mistake 6

Assuming eddy currents are always harmful.

Mistake 7

Drawing eddy current loops without Lenz-law direction.

Mistake 8

Forgetting that a moving open rod has emf but no current.

Mistake 9

Confusing magnetic braking force direction with velocity direction.

Mistake 10

Using end speed for rotating rod without integration.

Mistake 11

Ignoring resistance while finding current.

Mistake 12

Forgetting that flux change, not flux itself, produces emf.

Mistake 13

Drawing sliding rod current direction without using v × B.

Mistake 14

Forgetting that the magnetic force on the rod opposes motion.

Mistake 15

Mixing Faraday's law sign with magnitude problems.

Mistake 16

Ignoring number of turns in coil problems.

Mistake 17

Treating laminated and solid cores as identical.

Mistake 18

Using horizontal earth field when vertical component is needed.

Mistake 19

Forgetting dip angle relation Bv = H tanδ.

Mistake 20

Not specifying units of induced emf.

16. Rapid Formula Sheet

Motional EMFε = Blv sinθ
Perpendicular Rodε = Blv
CurrentI = ε/R = Blv/R
Magnetic DragF = B²l²v/R
Mechanical PowerP = B²l²v²/R
Faraday Lawε = −dΦ/dt
FluxΦ = BA cosθ
Flux Linkage
Total Chargeq = ΔΦ/R
Rotating Rodε = ½BωL²
Rotating Discε = ½BωR²
Train Axleε = Bvl

17. Exam Strategy

CBSE

Write the formula, draw a clean diagram, mention direction by Lenz law, and show unit conversions clearly.

NEET

Focus on direct but conceptually correct formula use, direction rules, and common train/rod/coil numericals.

JEE Main

Practise sliding rod energy, rotating disc and loop entering/leaving magnetic field.

JEE Advanced

Use flux integration, line integral of v × B and energy conservation in non-standard geometries.

IB / IGCSE

Emphasise conceptual explanations, practical applications and graph interpretation.

A-Level / ICSE

Prepare structured derivations, clear diagrams and numerical steps with correct units.

Still Finding Motional EMF and Eddy Currents Difficult?

If Motional EMF, Eddy Currents, Lenz Law, sliding rod problems, magnetic braking, induction furnace, train-axle EMF, NEET numericals, JEE Main problems, JEE Advanced concepts, IB Physics, IGCSE, ICSE or A-Level Physics is not clear, students can contact Kumar Sir for one-to-one Physics guidance.

Phone / WhatsApp: +91-9958461445 | Email: kumarsirphysics@gmail.com | Website: kumarphysicsclasses.com

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