from his book, Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation......
If that doesnt blow your "lid" nothing will
however Jefimenko never answers WHY,.....cause even he doesnt know. However the answer is simple.
Faraday was the originator of the concept of =the magnetic field, (which is described in terms of "magnetic curves" our present day "magnetic lines of force") however HE NEVER SO MUCH AS SUGGESTED in his works that induced currents were a resultant of changing magnetic fields. ON THE CONTRARY, he clearly associated the phenomena of electromagnetic induction with changing electrical currents. As per Maxwell, he TOO considered EM induction as a phenomena in which a current (or EM force) is induced in a circuit. but not as a phenomena in which a changing magnetic field causes an electrical field. He CLEARLY said that the induced EM force is "MEASURED BY, not CAUSED BY the changing mag field" Just as Faraday, he made NO allusion to ANY CAUSAL link between magnetic and electric fields - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Faraday never as much suggested that the induced currents were the result of changing magnetic fields, on the contrary he clearly associated the phenomena of electromagnetic induction with the changing electric currents, even when the induction was caused by the motion of a permanent magnet. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Maxwell too considered the electromagnetic induction as a phenomena in which a current is induced in a circuit, but not as a phenomena in which a changing magnetic field causes and electric field. He clearly said that the induced electromotive force is measured by, not caused by the changing magnetic field. Just as Faraday, he made no allusion to any causal link between magnetic and electric fields. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Neither of Maxwells equations nor their solutions indicate an existence of a causal links between electric and magnetic fields. Therefore we must conclude that an electromagnetic field is a dual entity always having an electric and a magnetic component simultaneously created by their common sources: time variable electric charges and currents. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
A time variable electric current creates an electric field parallel to that current. The field exerts an electric force on the charge in the nearby conductors thereby creating induced electric currents in them. This in the term “electromagnetic induction” is an actually a misnomer, since no magnetic effect is involved in the phenomena, and since the induced current is caused solely by the time variable electric current and by the electric field produced by that current. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
If that doesnt blow your "lid" nothing will
however Jefimenko never answers WHY,.....cause even he doesnt know. However the answer is simple.
Faraday was the originator of the concept of =the magnetic field, (which is described in terms of "magnetic curves" our present day "magnetic lines of force") however HE NEVER SO MUCH AS SUGGESTED in his works that induced currents were a resultant of changing magnetic fields. ON THE CONTRARY, he clearly associated the phenomena of electromagnetic induction with changing electrical currents. As per Maxwell, he TOO considered EM induction as a phenomena in which a current (or EM force) is induced in a circuit. but not as a phenomena in which a changing magnetic field causes an electrical field. He CLEARLY said that the induced EM force is "MEASURED BY, not CAUSED BY the changing mag field" Just as Faraday, he made NO allusion to ANY CAUSAL link between magnetic and electric fields - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Faraday never as much suggested that the induced currents were the result of changing magnetic fields, on the contrary he clearly associated the phenomena of electromagnetic induction with the changing electric currents, even when the induction was caused by the motion of a permanent magnet. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Maxwell too considered the electromagnetic induction as a phenomena in which a current is induced in a circuit, but not as a phenomena in which a changing magnetic field causes and electric field. He clearly said that the induced electromotive force is measured by, not caused by the changing magnetic field. Just as Faraday, he made no allusion to any causal link between magnetic and electric fields. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
Neither of Maxwells equations nor their solutions indicate an existence of a causal links between electric and magnetic fields. Therefore we must conclude that an electromagnetic field is a dual entity always having an electric and a magnetic component simultaneously created by their common sources: time variable electric charges and currents. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation
A time variable electric current creates an electric field parallel to that current. The field exerts an electric force on the charge in the nearby conductors thereby creating induced electric currents in them. This in the term “electromagnetic induction” is an actually a misnomer, since no magnetic effect is involved in the phenomena, and since the induced current is caused solely by the time variable electric current and by the electric field produced by that current. - Dr. Oleg D. Jefimenko Causality, Electromagnetic induction & Gravitation