R
Randy
Guest
A question concerning the characteristic of the Inductor:
an inductor opposes the current that created it and this opposition is
toward the source, termed cemf. Can this cemf be great enough to actually
stop the flow of current?
For example: an ac source supplying 10 volts @ 1 amp. If the cemf from the
inductor = 10 volts, would current flow, or would this stop the circuit
dead until something changed in the circuit?
I've learned a lot about inductors but, this is one component with
applications that seem to be endless.
An Inquiring Mind
Randy Gross
an inductor opposes the current that created it and this opposition is
toward the source, termed cemf. Can this cemf be great enough to actually
stop the flow of current?
For example: an ac source supplying 10 volts @ 1 amp. If the cemf from the
inductor = 10 volts, would current flow, or would this stop the circuit
dead until something changed in the circuit?
I've learned a lot about inductors but, this is one component with
applications that seem to be endless.
An Inquiring Mind
Randy Gross