All of those formulas relate to motor effect and so also induction, why can't we look at them? This is an induction question.
Reading into the question too much? Are you kidding me, its physics. They would definately make sure they put the right thing on the diagram. The galvanometer means they are expecting or getting very low currents.
Ok please explain how it is D. So far you are telling me that the earth's magnetic field direction and strength is completely irrelevant for the question, making no sense.
To quote you
Picking D is saying that its orientation will affect the current least. Well please look at the attached diagram. Let the top one (generator) be A and bottom one be B, both from top view, the thick line is the axes on which it rotates. Now which one would make a better generator? Obviously A. In B the only change in magnetic field is from the tiny top walls of the coil, and they arnt all going fast because as it gets closer to the rotating axes they get slower due to less radius. So the component perpendicular to the field is very small. In A its quite big, the coil goes along the radius (or rather is the radius), as you can see.
Now apply the diagram to the experiement. The squares are the north and south poles of the earth, the lines are the field, and the coil (the longer side going parallel with the axes) is the wire. Scenario A is where the wire is orientated east to west (the axes is going E to W). And scenario B is where its going North to South. That means that Scenario A is procucing much more current than scenario B. Yes the mag field may be weak but it does have a direction, and there will be a difference, a bigger difference than making the wire thicker.
Why would they specifically state in the question that the wire is 'of very low resisitance'? Its not just of low resisitance, its 'very' low. If a wire is of very low resisitance, then making it thicker wont make hardly any difference to the current. The orientation will. So if thickness affects it least, answer is B.
If you still disagree, please provide an explanation.
Reading into the question too much? Are you kidding me, its physics. They would definately make sure they put the right thing on the diagram. The galvanometer means they are expecting or getting very low currents.
Ok please explain how it is D. So far you are telling me that the earth's magnetic field direction and strength is completely irrelevant for the question, making no sense.
To quote you
If the earth's field isn't strong enough then it would produce so little current that making the wire bigger wont make any difference at all anyway, so you are supporting my arguement for B."although the earth's magnetic field is present, it is not significantly large enough to create any sizeable change in the amount of current produced"
Picking D is saying that its orientation will affect the current least. Well please look at the attached diagram. Let the top one (generator) be A and bottom one be B, both from top view, the thick line is the axes on which it rotates. Now which one would make a better generator? Obviously A. In B the only change in magnetic field is from the tiny top walls of the coil, and they arnt all going fast because as it gets closer to the rotating axes they get slower due to less radius. So the component perpendicular to the field is very small. In A its quite big, the coil goes along the radius (or rather is the radius), as you can see.
Now apply the diagram to the experiement. The squares are the north and south poles of the earth, the lines are the field, and the coil (the longer side going parallel with the axes) is the wire. Scenario A is where the wire is orientated east to west (the axes is going E to W). And scenario B is where its going North to South. That means that Scenario A is procucing much more current than scenario B. Yes the mag field may be weak but it does have a direction, and there will be a difference, a bigger difference than making the wire thicker.
Why would they specifically state in the question that the wire is 'of very low resisitance'? Its not just of low resisitance, its 'very' low. If a wire is of very low resisitance, then making it thicker wont make hardly any difference to the current. The orientation will. So if thickness affects it least, answer is B.
If you still disagree, please provide an explanation.
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