Thanks for the response.
Corolinth wrote:
It is at this point that I have to ask what your background in physics is thus far, because what you mean by "deeper connection between Lenz's Law and momentum" could differ greatly depending on where you are. This time last year you were preparing for a Calc I final, which means you likely took Calc II in the Spring, and Calc III either in the Summer or this past semester. I am assuming you are currently wrapping up Physics II and are asking questions typical of a student performing significantly "above grade level," as it were, and not as a student pursuing formal training in quantum mechanics.
Pretty good guesses. I wrapped up Physics II yesterday. I'm pursuing a CS undergrad, so I've completed Calc II. Oddly enough, Calc III is not a requirement for my degree. Maybe one of these days I'll dredge up the motivation to learn it on my own, but today is not that day.
By "deeper connection", I suppose all I really mean is: could you derive Faraday's Law (and thus Lenz's Law) from applying classical, mechanical laws of momentum to the momentum associated with a magnetic field? Superficially, the behavior seems similar; if you push on a field, it pushes back. But I don't know anywhere near enough about quantum field theory, or the mathematics behind it, to tell whether there's an actual analogue here, or just a superficial similarity. If they
are analogous, I don't expect to understand the whys and wherefores of it.
Corolinth wrote:
Quantum mechanics is even more bizarre than most of us think, for reasons the vast majority of us do not understand, and can not understand without more information.
In other words, exactly this. I read QED about a decade ago, so I have at least some sense of what you're talking about regarding electron behavior and holes. Mostly, though, I just learned that a lot of very abstract math is required to "understand" quantum behavior. Scare quotes intentional. You can analyze it, of course, but It will never make "sense" because nothing that anyone has direct experience with compares. For instance, particle/wave duality is somewhat fictitious. There's nothing schizophrenic about electrons -- at all times they follow the same set of rules. It's just that the consequences of those rules are unlike anything macroscopic. When we squeeze it one way it
reminds us of a particle and when we squeeze it the other way it
reminds us of a wave, but it's really neither of these things.
Corolinth wrote:
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is also more frequently stated in quantum mechanics as the relationship between position and momentum, as opposed to position and velocity like laypersons are taught.
This I happened to be aware of. In fact, it's what got me thinking along this line to begin with. I was only aware that fields have momentum because of quantum foam. A field with 0 magnitude would have an exact position and momentum, ergo that can't happen.
Corolinth wrote:
That statement of Lenz's Law that you've posted is missing a term compared to the form I'm most accustomed to seeing it in. Each coil of wire will produce that effect.
I was just giving the general form of Faraday's Law. For an inductor, yes, N loops = N surfaces of integration, so emf = -N*dΦ/dt as you say.
Corolinth wrote:
suddenly interrupt the circuit, the large inductor is still carrying all that current, and it doesn't care that the circuit is now broken. It still requires a huge amount of energy to slow that current down to 0. That will build up a huge voltage (much higher than normal system voltage) at the place where you broke the circuit. The results can be very spectacular if the circuit interrupter isn't strong enough.
Heh. We had plenty of material on the transient response of R-L and R-C circuits, and on the resonance of L-C and L-R-C circuits, but inductive kickback was never specifically mentioned. The last question on our third exam (he always tosses one curveball at us) involved abruptly disconnecting a 12V battery from an inductor and getting an arc across the gap. In other words, he was testing if anyone could figure out that inductive kickback is a thing without being told about it. Our exams are take-home format. I worked out the problem one evening and got a call from a friend the next morning. His car had broken down and he wanted me to take a look at it. The problem turned out to be that he had blown his ignition coil. Life is funny that way.