Okay so I was discussing with my teacher about whether the Meissner effect applied to Maglev trains (where I disagreed with this and my teacher agreed with this). I stated that the Meissner effect stated that when a perfect eddy current (I say perfect because a superconductor has no resistance) generated an internal magnetic field powerful enough to totally oppose the external magnetic field in the opposite direction, thereby repelling the external magnetic field from the solid superconductor. So I questioned how a perfect eddy current could be generated in an on-board superconducting electromagnet in order to totally oppose the external magnetic field.
My teacher than told me that very small eddy currents were generated in the superconducting wire, so I told her that I thought only eddy currents were generated in solid conductors only and my teacher said no. I always thought that the induced current only followed the path of the wire?
TL: DR
Are eddy currents really generated in superconducting wires (or a superconducting electromagnet to be specific)? And do Maglev trains really use the Meissner effect?
My teacher than told me that very small eddy currents were generated in the superconducting wire, so I told her that I thought only eddy currents were generated in solid conductors only and my teacher said no. I always thought that the induced current only followed the path of the wire?
TL: DR
Are eddy currents really generated in superconducting wires (or a superconducting electromagnet to be specific)? And do Maglev trains really use the Meissner effect?