Tesla coil
Question: How does a tesla coil
work?
Answer:
This device, called a Tesla coil or an Induction
coil, which is the basis of many ignition systems for cars, uses the mutual inductance
between two coils to produce a high voltage.
A primary coil consisting of a small
number of turns of thick copper wire is wound round a bundle of soft iron rods which are
insulated from each other. The secondary coil, which may consist of many hundreds of
metres of fine wire, is wound over the primary.
On closing the switch a current flows
in the primary and magnetises the core, which attracts the armature and breaks the primary
circuit. The magnetic field dies away; the armature is pulled back by the spring and the
current flows again. The process then repeats itself.
The rapidly changing magnetic
field produces a high voltage in the primary coil; the greater the rate at which this field
changes, the greater is the induced voltage. A capacitor is connected across the make and
break contacts; this reduces sparking and also causes the field to die away much more
rapidly than if the capacitor had not been present. As a result the induced voltage in the
secondary is much greater when the circuit is broken than when it is made. The secondary
current therefore pulsates, but it is always in the same direction. Sparks of several
centimetres in length may be obtained through air at atmospheric pressure with quite small
induction coils, and larger coils were originally used to power X-ray
tubes.
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