Maxwell–Lodge effect
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The Maxwell-Lodge effect is a phenomenon of electromagnetic induction in which an electric charge, near a solenoid in which current changes slowly, feels an electromotive force (e.m.f.) even if the magnetic field is practically static inside and null outside. It can be considered a classical analogue of the quantum mechanical Aharonov–Bohm effect, where instead the field is exactly static inside and null outside.
The term appeared in the scientific literature in a 2008 article,[1] referring to an article of 1889 by physicist Oliver Lodge.[2]