Asked by london

An electromagnet is a device that uses an electric current to produce a magnetic field.

Electromagnets are typically composed of a piece of metal wrapped with wire and connected to a battery. The battery provides the electric current, and the loops or coils of wire enhance the magnetic field. The more loops there are, the stronger the magnetic field.

When electric current flows through the electromagnet, the metal core becomes magnetized, so it possesses a north pole and a south pole.

Motors place electromagnets inside of permanent magnets as shown below.



However, motors are designed so that the polarity of the electromagnet constantly flips. That is, the north pole becomes the south pole, and the south pole becomes the north pole, every time the electromagnet turns 180 degrees.

Why is it designed this way?
A.
so the electromagnet will continuously turn
B.
to conserve the energy in the battery
C.
so the magnetic field will get stronger
D.
to constantly polarize the field magnet

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
A. so the electromagnet will continuously turn

Explanation: If the coil's polarity didn't reverse every half-turn, the torque would reverse when the coil passes alignment and the motor would stop or oscillate. Flipping the polarity (via a commutator) keeps the torque in the same rotational direction so the rotor keeps turning.