OF Course it can ,it is named undershoot in that case .
Do a search and you will understand it better
Peak to Peak is the most positive peak to the negative peak value. Or find any peak value and multiply by 2.
No. 12 volts peak to peak would be 6 in the positive polarity and 6 negative polarity. Simply saying 12 volts AC would be 12 volts in each polarity or 24 volts peak to peak
it's highest swing positive or negative. 90 and 270 degrees. the peak for a 10vAC generator would be 10vAC
A: AC or our line voltage is sinusoidal in nature it goes up to a positive peak returns to zero and proceed to the negative peak. 120V AC is actually swinging from peak to peak. It is 120 volts but the peak is the 120 v times 1.41 or 169.2 volts and since it also go negative then the peak to peak 120 volts times 2.82 or 338.40 volts or twice the peak voltage
The input voltage, an AC Sine Wave will have a Peak-to-Peak value equal to 2X its Peak value. Once rectified, all the Peaks will be either above or below the Zero reference line. They'll look like a series of identical bumps. The net value of the unrectified voltage will be Zero. The positive and negative waveforms canceling each other out. The rectified waveform will be all positive or negative and its net value will be non-zero. Its AVERAGE value will be .636 times its Peak value. Its Root Mean Square (RMS) value will be .707 times its Peak value. Its Peak-to-Peak value will equal 1X the Peak value.
0.0947
0.0947
According to some references I checked, the overshoot will be:100*exp[z*pi/sqrt(1-z^2)]where "z" is the damping ratioThis is about 9.5% at z=0.6Source(s):
what is overshoot in anatomy
It is denoted by Mp . It is the normalized difference between the peak of the time response and steady output.Mp = { C(tp) - C(∞) }/ C(∞) *100
A sine wave centered at zero will have a positive peak that is the same magnitude as the negative peak. This can be offset so the negative peak magnitude does not match the positive peak magnitude. For example a 1volt peak - neutral sine wave could be DC offset by 1 volt so the positive peak is at 2 volts and the negative peak is at 0.
Peak to Peak is the most positive peak to the negative peak value. Or find any peak value and multiply by 2.
it's highest swing positive or negative. 90 and 270 degrees. the peak for a 10vAC generator would be 10vAC
overshoot and stability
No. 12 volts peak to peak would be 6 in the positive polarity and 6 negative polarity. Simply saying 12 volts AC would be 12 volts in each polarity or 24 volts peak to peak
it's highest swing positive or negative. 90 and 270 degrees. the peak for a 10vAC generator would be 10vAC
Trough A+