Dear All
I recently watched Walter Lewins lecture on Faraday's law. In this lecture at the end he does a super demo in which he measures the same point with 2 different voltmeters and gets 2 results that are different.
Video Lecture here
He has a pretty large youtube channel and I posted a comment under this video
https://youtu.be/wz_GqO-Urk4Here is the dialog
TheEngineer
9 hours ago
The math and theory hold up but in the physical set up how did you determine which oscilloscope measured which path? If they are measuring the same exact spot would it be defined? If I added a third oscilloscope what would it measure? Does the orientation of the probes have any effect? Do you have a picture of the set up, with the placement of the probes? Thanks for your time.?
REPLY
Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ? Physics.
Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ? Physics.
8 hours ago
watch this video. The current through each voltmeter determines the reading of the voltmeter and those currents vary in my case by a factor of about 10. watch this video watch this video?
REPLY
TheEngineer
TheEngineer
8 hours ago
The video does not answer which meter is V1 and V2. If I were to repeat the experiment is it possible that they would switch places? If I add another meter could it measure something completely different, or effect the measurements of the others??
REPLY
Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ? Physics.
Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ? Physics.
7 hours ago
>>>The video does not answer which meter is V1 and V2>>>
you are mistaken. Watch the video again. V1 and V2 are clearly indicated. I1 goes through V1 and I2 goes through V2 and my calculations show that the ration I2/I1 is about 9 and that the currents are in opposite direction; I1 goes through V1 in the -- to ++ and I2 goes in ++ to -- direction of V2. Thus the ratio of the magnitude of V2/V1 is 9 and the polarities are REVERSED This is my last response. Please learn to watch!?
I found him to be quite rude "Please Learn to watch" and he also did not answer my question.
So here is my question to everyone.
1. Has anyone made a replica of his set up exactly? Was anyone able to replicate his results?
2. What would you measure with only one voltmeter?
3. Assuming the voltmeters are exactly the same how would you determine which voltmeter would be V1 and which would be V2.
4. What would happen if I add a third meter? What would it measure?
Please assume the theory is correct and that he is violating KVL. Also assume he is measuring the same exact point.
Thanks