Cyclopedia of Telephony & Telegraphy Vol. 1 - A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc. by Robert Millikan;Samuel McMeen;George Patterson;Kempster Miller;Charles Thom
page 188 of 497 (37%)
page 188 of 497 (37%)
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total flow of lines of force as the presence of a piece of bad
conductor in a circuit composed otherwise of good conductor, in the case of the flow of electric current. Reluctance. As the property which opposes the flow of electric current in an electrical circuit is called _resistance_, so the property which opposes the flow of magnetic lines of force in a magnetic circuit is called _reluctance_. In the case of the electric circuit, the resistance is the reciprocal of the conductivity; in the case of the magnetic circuit, the reluctance is the reciprocal of the permeability. As in the case of an electrical circuit, the amount of flow of current is equal to the electromotive force divided by the resistance; so in a magnetic circuit, the magnetic flux is equal to the magnetizing force or magnetomotive force divided by the reluctance. [Illustration: Fig. 90. Bar Electromagnet] Types of Low-Reluctance Circuits. As the pull of an electromagnet upon its armature depends on the total number of lines of force passing from the core to the armature--that is, on the total flux--and as the total flux depends for a given magnetizing force on the reluctance of the magnetic circuit, it is obvious that the design of the electromagnetic circuit is of great importance in influencing the action of the magnet. Obviously, anything that will reduce the amount of air or other non-magnetic material that is in the magnetic circuit will tend to reduce the reluctance, and, therefore, to increase the total magnetization resulting from a given magnetizing force. _Horseshoe Form._ One of the easiest and most common ways of reducing |
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