| inductor | 1. The person who inducts another into an office or benefice. 2. <physics> That portion of an electrical apparatus, in which is the inducing charge or current. Origin: L, one who stirs up or rouses. See Induce. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| inductorium | Origin: NL, fr. E. Induction. <physics> An induction coil. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| inductor |
an electrical device (typically a conducting coil) that introduces inductance into a circuit
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| inductor |
a passive electronic component that stores energy as a magnetic field. In it's simplest form an inductor is made up of a coil of wire. The inductance measured in henrys, is proportional to the number of turns of wire, the wire loop diameter and the material or core the wire is wound around..
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| inductor |
A coil of wire, usually wound in a special core of high permeability, which provides high inductance without necessarily being of high resistance.
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| 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.
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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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| inductor | an electrical device that introduces inductance into a circuit |
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