In reply to  H L V's message of Tue, 5 Mar 2024 09:28:31 -0500:
Hi,

You don't need an experiment to figure this out. The field obviously rotates 
with the magnet.
This is because the field is not a single entity. It is the sum of all the tiny 
fields created by the electrons attached
to individual atoms, so when the magnet rotates, the atoms all move, taking 
their individual fields with them. We know
they do this because when the magnet is moved sideways, instead of rotating, 
the field moves sideways as well. IOW, the
atomic fields are attached to their individual atoms. There is no reason this 
should change when rotation is involved
rather than translation.

[snip]
>Resolving the paradox of unipolar induction: new experimental evidence on
>the influence of the test circuit (Free to download. Published 2022)
>https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-21155-x
Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

Drive your electric car every second day and recharge it from solar panels on 
your roof on the alternate days.
The other days, drive your spouses car, and do the same with it.

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