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Mike's Pages G3 JKX |
8 Magnetic Fields Moving a wire in a magnetic field causes a current to flow in it. Keeping the wire still
and moving the magnetic field has the same effect. Your receiving aerial does just this, converting
moving alternating magnetic fields into alternating currents for your Rx to sort out.
Giving a wire some current also causes a magnetic field to be produced. Your TX PA is an
electron pump and, as your aerial is conductive, it also produces magnetic fields.
Applying a voltage to a coil of wire produces a strong magnetic field. As this field
builds, it induces another voltage into the coil, called the ‘back EMF’, which opposes the applied
voltage. This means that the current flow starts off quite small and takes some time
to reach a maximum. In other words a coil has inertia, which is called Inductance, the unit
of which is the Henry or H for short! (For RF frequencies, a Henry is too large a unit. e.g at
VHF, coils of a fraction of a microHenry are used). If you now switch off the applied voltage,
the resulting collapse of the magnetic field causes another back EMF to be induced
which tries to prop up the rapidly falling applied voltage and reinforces the falling current!
These ‘back EMFs’ can be very high, especially if the magnetic field is very strong and can
cause quite high reverse or overswing voltages to be generated. To prevent a relay coil from
doing so when it is de-energised, a diode is wired across the coil to short it out when the
reverse/overswing polarity appears, safeguarding nearby circuits which may be damaged if,
say, a large negative voltage appears on the collector of an NPN transistor. That’s about it for this time. Vy 73. Mike G3JKX |