| inductance |
(L) In general, the ability of a conductor to produce a magnetic field. In particular, magnetic flux divided by current, measured in henries (H). L=F/I. Or, the voltage (back emf) a conductor generates divided by rate of change of current in that conductor (self inductance) or another conductor (mutual inductance). L= -V/(dI/dt), where dI/dt is the rate of current change.
Ãâó: www.rcmicroflight.com/library/glossary.asp
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| inductance |
the "size"of an inductor, not the actual physical size, but the "electrical" size. The unit of inductance is the Henry, or "H". Most power supply inductors, or chokes, are measured in henries, typically 2-20H. The inductance of a transformer primary may also be several henries. Smaller inductors are measured in millihenries (mH - 10^-3 henries) or microhenries (uH - 10^-6 henries).
Ãâó: www.aikenamps.com/AmpTerms.html
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| inductance |
The characteristic of coil or wire to cause the current to lag the voltage in time phase. The current reaches its peak after the voltage does.
Ãâó: www.usmotors.com/Terms/1-122-I.htm
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| inductance |
A changing current in a coil produces a changing magnetic flux. The changing magnetic flux results in an induced current flowing in the coil. The unit is a Henry. One Henry is the inductance of a circuit that produces a counter-force of 1 volt when the current flowing is changing at the rate of 1 amp per second.
Ãâó: www.scientificindia.com/gi.htm
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| inductance |
(Motor Winding Constant) - This is the inductance of the motor armature as measured at the motor terminals. It is given in millihenries.
Ãâó: www.servomag.com/reference/glossary.htm
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