Concept:
Faraday’s law of electromagnetic induction:
\[
\mathcal{E} = -\frac{d\Phi}{dt}
\]
Where:
\( \mathcal{E} \) = induced emf
\( \Phi \) = magnetic flux
Important idea:
Induced emf depends on rate of change of flux, not just flux.
Step 1: Analyze Assertion (A).
If magnetic flux linked with a coil increases (and especially changes rapidly), induced emf increases.
Thus, the assertion is generally considered true in practical context.
Step 2: Analyze Reason (R).
The reason states:
\[
\mathcal{E} \propto \Phi
\]
This is incorrect.
From Faraday’s law:
\[
\mathcal{E} \propto \frac{d\Phi}{dt}
\]
So emf depends on the rate of change of flux, not flux itself.
Step 3: Conclusion.
Assertion → True
Reason → False
Hence, option (C).