Electromagnetic Induction in Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science (0654): Induced e.m.f., Faraday's Law and Lenz's Law Explained
Who this is for: Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science (0654) students who want electromagnetic induction — induced e.m.f., changing flux and Lenz’s law — to become a reliable source of marks instead of a vague “moving magnet” answer.
What query it owns: how to understand and revise electromagnetic induction in Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science.
Why this is safe: this page owns the electromagnetic-induction revision-guide angle, while Tutopiya’s Electromagnetic Induction subtopic page owns the learning resource and the free Electromagnetic Induction quiz owns the practice.
Electromagnetic induction is the production of an induced e.m.f. when a conductor cuts magnetic field lines or when the magnetic flux through a coil changes. Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science (0654) expects you to explain why a current is induced, state the factors that increase the induced e.m.f., and apply Lenz’s law. This guide links each idea to the explanation questions examiners set.
Key takeaways
- An induced e.m.f. appears when there is relative motion between a conductor and a magnetic field, or when flux through a coil changes.
- Faster movement, a stronger field, or more turns on the coil increases the induced e.m.f.
- Lenz’s law: the induced current opposes the change that caused it.
- A d.c. generator uses induction; so does a transformer (changing flux in the core).
- Induced current direction follows Fleming’s right-hand rule (generator rule).
What is electromagnetic induction in Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science?
Electromagnetic induction occurs when a conductor moves through a magnetic field or when the magnetic field linked to a coil changes. The changing flux induces an e.m.f. across the conductor; if the circuit is complete, an induced current flows. Moving a magnet into a solenoid, spinning a coil in a field, or switching a primary coil current all demonstrate induction — the basis of generators and transformers.
You can read the full explanation, diagrams and notes on Tutopiya’s Electromagnetic Induction subtopic page before you attempt questions.
Factors affecting induced e.m.f.
| Factor | Effect on induced e.m.f. |
|---|---|
| Speed of cutting field lines | Faster → larger e.m.f. |
| Strength of magnetic field | Stronger field → larger e.m.f. |
| Number of turns on coil | More turns → larger e.m.f. |
| Rate of change of flux | Faster change → larger e.m.f. |
Induction methods compared
| Method | What changes | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Conductor moves in field | Conductor cuts flux lines | Wire swung between magnet poles |
| Magnet moves near coil | Flux through coil changes | Magnet pushed into solenoid |
| Field strength changes | Flux density changes | Alternating current in nearby coil |
Electromagnetic induction in past-paper wording
| Command word | What the question wants | Typical stem |
|---|---|---|
| State | Name a factor or law | ”State one factor that increases the induced e.m.f.” |
| Describe | What happens during induction | ”Describe how a current is induced in a coil.” |
| Explain | Apply Lenz’s law or factors | ”Explain why the induced current opposes the motion of the magnet.” |
| Suggest | Improve a demonstration | ”Suggest how to increase the reading on the galvanometer.” |
Worked exam-style stems
- “A magnet is moved quickly into a coil connected to a galvanometer. Explain why a reading is observed.” The changing magnetic flux through the coil induces an e.m.f.; current flows and deflects the galvanometer. Reward: changing flux + induced e.m.f./current.
- “State Lenz’s law.” The direction of the induced current is such that it opposes the change causing it. Reward: opposes the change.
- “Suggest two ways to increase the induced e.m.f. in a simple generator.” Move the coil faster; use a stronger magnet; increase number of turns. Reward: any two valid factors.
Test yourself with the Electromagnetic Induction quiz once you can explain induction and state the factors without a diagram.
How electromagnetic induction connects to the syllabus
Induction is the principle behind the A.C. Generator and Transformer. It builds on magnetic fields from Electromagnetic Effects. The Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science resource hub links every Electromagnetic Effects subtopic.
Common mistakes students make
- Saying induction needs a battery (relative motion or changing flux is enough).
- Confusing Fleming’s left-hand rule (motor) with right-hand rule (generator).
- Forgetting that no e.m.f. is induced when flux is constant (no relative motion).
- Stating Lenz’s law as “opposes the magnet” without mentioning the change.
- Mixing up transformer operation with a simple wire-cutting demonstration.
When you need more support
If induction explanation questions keep costing marks, work through the Electromagnetic Induction quiz, then get focused help from a Cambridge IGCSE Coordinated Science tutor.
Frequently asked questions
Is electromagnetic induction hard in Coordinated Science? Learn the three factors (speed, field strength, turns), Lenz’s law and one demonstration — that covers most questions.
What causes an induced e.m.f.? A conductor cutting magnetic field lines or a change in magnetic flux through a coil.
What is Lenz’s law? The induced current flows in a direction that opposes the change producing it.
How do I revise electromagnetic induction effectively? Practise explaining magnet-and-coil demonstrations, state factors and Lenz’s law, then take the quiz.
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