Faraday’s law is the basic law of electromagnetism which explains that a magnetic field interacts with an electric circuit to produce an electromotive force (EMF) and this phenomenon is known as electromagnetic induction. He concluded that the Galvanometer did not show any deflection and no induced current was produced in the coil when the coil was moved in a stationary magnetic field. When the magnet was moved away from the loop then the ammeter deflected in the opposite direction. From this experiment, Faraday concluded that whenever there is a relative motion between a conductor and a magnetic field, the flux linkage with a coil changes, and this change in flux induces a voltage across a coil.