| inductor |
Used most often in crossovers and filters, an inductor is an electronic device whichwith presents a low impedance to DC (it allows it to pass), but an increasing impedance to AC as frequency rises. It has the opposite characteristic to a capacitor and is physically a coil of wire, sometimes with a ferrite core.
Ãâó: www.dilettantesdictionary.com/index.php
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| inductor |
Length of conductor used to introduce inductance into a circuit. The conductor is usually wound into a coil to concentrate the magnetic lines of force and maximize the inductance. While any conductor has inductance, in common usage the term inductor usually refers to a coil.
Ãâó: www.sciencelobby.com/dictionary/i.html
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| inductance |
Property of a circuit to oppose a change in current. The moving magnetic field produced by a change in current causes an induced voltage to oppose the original change.
Ãâó: www.sciencelobby.com/dictionary/i.html
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| inductance |
An electromotive force that has been induced by a varying current in a conductor (measured in Henrys).
Ãâó: www.satellite-tv-hq.com/telecom-glossary-i.htm
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| induction of labor |
The use of artificial means to start the process of childbirth.
Ãâó: www.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/factbk2/glossary.htm
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