jamesfirst
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2010
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- HSC
- 2011
I'm confused. Some sources say that it's different to Lenz's law, but I just think it's logically that the principle can be applied to Meissner effect.
Then how does Meissner effect work ?? Why the repulsion??Meissner effect is about superconductors repelling magnetic fields. Lenz's Law is about electromagnetic circuits inducing currents that repel the change in flux or something.
They aren't the same.
What they want you to know for the HSC is similar to Lenz' Law.But in superconductors, the current can exist forever as long as the critical temperature stays constant. So if eddy currents are initially induced in the superconductor with an initial changing magnetic flux, wouldn't it make sense to think that the magnetic flux will permeate forever until the temperature rises?...
So the flux will stay there to levitate the magnet. That's what my teacher told me as well.
Your teacher is definitely wrong with that statement! The SC itself does not experience a change in flux and in fact more or less "mirror-images" the magnetic field from the SCWe didn't perform the experiment like that.
We first added the liquid nitrogen to the ceramic and dropped the magnet. The teacher said that the magnet won't levitate if it's initially placed on the ceramic before the liquid nitrogen went in...