Quantum Imaging Lab
This episode explores electromagnetism — the branch of physics studying how moving electric charges create magnetic fields — and traces its historical development from Alessandro Volta's invention of the Voltaic pile in 1800 to Hans Oersted's 1820 discovery that electric current deflects a compass needle. The Right Hand Thumb Rule is introduced to determine the direction of magnetic field lines around a current-carrying conductor, followed by a progression from straight wire to wire loop to solenoid to electromagnet, showing how field strength increases with coil turns and applied current. Faraday's Law (1831) is then presented — a changing magnetic field induces a voltage in a nearby conductor — along with the four factors that determine the magnitude of induced current: field strength, velocity, angle, and number of coil turns. The second half covers Lenz's Law, establishing that induced current always opposes the change that produced it, followed by the distinction between self-induction and mutual induction, with transformers identified as a key application of mutual induction. Electric generators and motors are compared as inverse electromechanical devices — one converting mechanical energy to electrical, the other electrical to mechanical. The induction motor is examined in detail, including its rotor-stator structure, operating speeds of 3,000–12,000 rpm, and its critical role in rotating the x-ray tube anode. The episode closes with the capacitor and its application in portable x-ray systems. This episode aligns with the Safety content category — Radiation Physics and Radiobiology subcategory — of the ARRT Radiography Examination Content Specifications. Audio content is adapted from original instructional material developed by Professor Sanjay Arya, M.S., R.T.(R)(MR) for radiologic technology education. Part of the Radiologic Physics series — Quantum Imaging Lab. © 2026 Quantum Imaging Lab. All rights reserved.
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