logajan@ns.network.com (John Logajan) (04/12/90)
Okay, so a homopolar generator stops in 1/3rd rotation. Where did the angular momentum go? Surely it didn't exit via the axle. Surely it didn't exit (mechanically) via the (as I understand it) diametrically opposing brushes. Signed -- confused in Minnesota. -- - John Logajan @ Network Systems; 7600 Boone Ave; Brooklyn Park, MN 55428 - logajan@ns.network.com, john@logajan.mn.org, 612-424-4888, Fax 424-2853
grege@gold.GVG.TEK.COM (Gregory Ebert) (04/12/90)
In article <1990Apr12.043832.6000@ns.network.com> logajan@ns.network.com (John Logajan) writes: >Okay, so a homopolar generator stops in 1/3rd rotation. Where did the >angular momentum go? Surely it didn't exit via the axle. Surely it >didn't exit (mechanically) via the (as I understand it) diametrically >opposing brushes. > >Signed -- confused in Minnesota. > Think of it as a flywheel driving a conventional generator. As electrical energy is consumed (by a projectile ?) the beast coasts to a stop. One point that needs to be clarified is the location of the brushes. One brush is the axle itself, and the other(s) are along the circumference of the drum. The induced voltage is zero across diametrically opposing brushes. The homopolar generator will produce a current through a closed circuit through the axle, outward to the circumference of the drum, and through the brush (and of course through the load). A MAGNETIC FIELD IS REQUIRED. To get mongo currents, you aid the initial magnetic field produced by a permanent magnet, with large coils driven by the generator itself. This is positive feedback at its height of glory! To get the thing to stop in 1/3 revolution (eek!) you need a lot of low inductance coils in parallel. The exact equation describing the time it takes to stop is a second-order differential equation. Perhaps I should work it out and post my findings.
bph@buengc.BU.EDU (Blair P. Houghton) (04/14/90)
In article <911@gold.GVG.TEK.COM> grege@gold.GVG.TEK.COM (Gregory Ebert) writes: >In article <1990Apr12.043832.6000@ns.network.com> logajan@ns.network.com (John Logajan) writes: >>Okay, so a homopolar generator stops in 1/3rd rotation. Where did the >>angular momentum go? Surely it didn't exit via the axle. Surely it >>didn't exit (mechanically) via the (as I understand it) diametrically >>opposing brushes. The last one. Because they're diametrically opposed it means that they produce a pure torque (a "couple"), rather than a torque with an offset linear force. >>Signed -- confused in Minnesota. > > Think of it as a flywheel driving a conventional generator. As electrical > energy is consumed (by a projectile ?) the beast coasts to a stop. He was asking about momentum, not energy. I think you'll find that if you don't have your homopolar generator bolted securely to something REALLY massive, then when you stop the rotor the housing will bounce and roll out of the room. If you do bolt it down, the angular momentum goes back where it came from: the planet. --Blair "If Earth stopped spinning tomorrow, such things would be outlawed."