50Hz
to ensure circuit is complete and frequency is proportional to intencity and glowing bulb show intencity
A cycloconverter or a cycloinverter converts an AC waveform, such as the mains supply, to another AC waveform of a lower frequency, synthesizing the output waveform from segments of the AC supply without an intermediate direct-current link.
The mains voltage is 230 volts, and the frequency is 50Hz.
-- 60 Hz mains in North America, Latin America, a few other places -- 50 Hz mains in Europe, Asia, most other places -- Anything at all, from DC to daylight, depending on the application, in non-mains circuits
It depends on the rectifier. For a half-wave, it's the same as the AC mains: i.e. 60 Hz mains gives 60 Hz ripple. For a full-wave or a bridge, it's twice the AC mains: 60 Hz mains gives 120 Hz ripple. Three-phase systems are more complicated, so you would need to check in an electrical engineering book.
It depends on the rectifier. For a half-wave, it's the same as the AC mains: i.e. 60 Hz mains gives 60 Hz ripple. For a full-wave or a bridge, it's twice the AC mains: 60 Hz mains gives 120 Hz ripple. Three-phase systems are more complicated, so you would need to check in an electrical engineering book.
no
The mains supply in Scotland is 50Hz.
no
AC 220/240 volts
An electrosurgical generator is a piece of medical equipment. The generator takes mains AC current and turns it into radio frequency (>100Khz) AC current. This current can then be used to cause a tissue effect in a patient (i.e. cutting, coagulation, fulguration).