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blackout

  (blăk'out') pronunciation
n.
  1. A cutoff of electrical power, especially as a result of a shortage, a mechanical failure, or overuse by consumers.
  2. The concealment or extinguishment of lights that might be visible to enemy aircraft during an air raid.
    1. The sudden extinguishment of all stage lights in a theater to indicate the passage of time or to mark the end of an act or scene.
    2. A short, comic vaudeville skit that ends with lights off.
  3. A temporary loss of memory or consciousness.
    1. A suppression, as of news, by censorship.
    2. Restriction or prohibition of telecasting a sports event in order to ensure ticket sales.

SYNONYMS  blackout, faint, swoon, syncope. These nouns denote a temporary loss of consciousness: suffers blackouts at high altitudes; fell in a dead faint at the sight of the body; sank to the ground in a swoon; was taken to the clinic in a state of syncope.


 
 

A complete loss of power. See brownout.



 
Thesaurus: blackout

noun

    A temporary loss of consciousness: faint, swoon. Pathology syncope. See awareness/unawareness.

 

n

Brief impairment of short- and long-term memory occurring during episodes of excessive alcohol consumption or of other substance abuse; consciousness is retained.

 

A temporary loss of consciousness. This has many causes, including a direct blow to the head See also concussion, weight-lifter's blackout.

 
Word Tutor: blackout
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - Partial or total loss of memory or consciousness; The failure of electric power for a general region.

Tutor's tip: When the president had a "blackout" (loss of consciousness), the government wanted to "black out" (censor) the news on his medical condition.

 
Wikipedia: power outage
Tree limbs create a short circuit in electrical lines during a storm that spawned two tornadoes.
Enlarge
Tree limbs create a short circuit in electrical lines during a storm that spawned two tornadoes.

A power outage (also known as power cut, power failure or power loss) is the loss of the electricity supply to an area.

The reasons for a power failure can for instance be a defect in a power station, damage to a power line or other part of the distribution system, a short circuit, or the overloading of electricity mains. While the developed countries enjoy a highly uninterrupted supply of electric power all the time, many developing countries have acute power shortage as compared to the demand.

Some developing countries, such as Pakistan, and newly-industrialized countries such as India, have several hours of daily power-cuts in almost all cities and villages because the increase in demand for electricity exceeds the increase in electric power generation. Wealthier people in these countries may use a power-inverter (rechargeable batteries) or a diesel/petrol-run electric generator at their homes during the power-cut. The use of standby generators is common in industrial and IT hubs in India such as Bangalore and Gurgaon.

A power outage may take one of three forms:

Blackout
where power is lost completely. "Load shedding" or a rolling blackout is a common term for a controlled way of rotating available generation capacity between various districts or customers, thus avoiding wide area total blackouts.
Brownout
where the voltage level is below the normal minimum level specified for the system. Systems supplied with three-phase electric power also suffer brownouts if one or more phases are absent, at reduced voltage, or incorrectly phased. Such malfunctions are particularly damaging to electric motors. Some brownouts, called voltage reductions, are made intentionally to prevent a full power outage.
Dropout
where the loss of power is only momentary (milliseconds to seconds).

Power failures are particularly critical for hospitals, since many life-critical medical devices and tasks require power. For this reason hospitals, just like many enterprises (notably colocation facilities and other datacenters), have emergency power generators which are typically powered by diesel fuel and configured to start automatically, as soon as a power failure occurs. In most third world countries, power cuts go unnoticed by most citizens of upscale means, as maintaining an uninterruptible power supply is often considered an essential facility of a home.

Power outage may also be the cause of sanitary sewer overflow, a condition of discharging raw sewage into the environment. Other life-critical systems such as telecommunications are also required to have emergency power. Telephone exchange rooms usually have arrays of lead-acid batteries for backup and also a socket for connecting a diesel generator during extended periods of outage.

Power outages may also be caused by terrorism (attacking power plants or electricity pylons) in developing countries. The Shining Path movement was the first to copy this tactic from Mao Zedong.

Protecting the power system from outages

In power supply networks, the power generation and the electrical load (demand) must be very close to equal every second to avoid overloading of network components, which can severely damage them. In order to prevent this, parts of the system will automatically disconnect themselves from the rest of the system, or shut themselves down to avoid damage. This is analogous to the role of relays and fuses in households.

Under certain conditions, a network component shutting down can cause current fluctuations in neighboring segments of the network, though this is unlikely, leading to a cascading failure of a larger section of the network. This may range from a building, to a block, to an entire city, to the entire electrical grid.

Modern power systems are designed to be resistant to this sort of cascading failure, but it may be unavoidable (see below). Moreover, since there is no short-term economic benefit to preventing rare large-scale failures, some observers have expressed concern that there is a tendency to erode the resilience of the network over time, which is only corrected after a major failure occurs. It has been claimed that reducing the likelihood of small outages only increases the likelihood of larger ones. In that case, the short-term economic benefit of keeping the individual customer happy increases the likelihood of large-scale blackouts.

Restoring power after a wide-area outage

Restoring power after a wide-area outage can be difficult, as power stations need to be brought back on-line. Normally, this is done with the help of power from the rest of the grid. In the absence of grid power, a so-called black start needs to be performed to bootstrap the power grid into operation.


See also: Uninterruptible power supply

Blackout unavoidabillity and electric sustainability

It has recently been argued on the basis of historical data[1] and computer modelling[2] that power grids are self-organized critical systems. These systems exhibit unavoidable[3] disturbances of all sizes, up to the size of the entire system, and attempts to reduce the probability of small disturbances only increase the probability of large ones[4]. This has immediate policy implications[1]. The following are the relevant quotations from the sources cited:

As expected from studies of general self-organised critical systems, ... apparently sensible efforts to reduce the risk of smaller blackouts can sometimes increase the risk of large blackouts [4]
...the NERC blackout data suggests that the North American power system has been operating near criticality. ...It would be better to analyze this tradeoff between catastrophic blackout risk and loading instead of just waiting for the effects to manifest themselves in the North American power system! [1]
[The models'] PDF of the blackouts size has the same power dependence that have been found from the analysis of NERC data for the North American power grid over a period of 15 years. [2]
First and perhaps most striking is the intrinsic unavoidability of cascading events in such a system when driven near its operational limits. [3]

A complex network-based model to control large cascading failures (blackouts) using local information only was proposed in A. E. Motter, Cascade control and defense in complex networks, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 098701 (2004).

See also

References

External links


 
Translations: Blackout

Dansk (Danish)
n. - blackout, momentan bevidstløshed

Nederlands (Dutch)
verduistering, bewusteloosheid, plotseling geheugenverlies

Français (French)
n. - trou de mémoire, étourdissement, évanouissement, panne d'électricité, black-out, (Théât) obscurcissement de la scène

Deutsch (German)
n. - Verdunkelung

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - σκοτοδίνη, λιποθυμία, προσωρινή αμνησία, συσκότιση (πόλης κ.λπ.), (γενική) διακοπή ρεύματος, απαγόρευση μετάδοσης ειδήσεων
v. - λιποθυμώ, παθαίνω σκοτοδίνη, συσκοτίζω, σκοτεινιάζω, μαυρίζω, απαγορεύω τη δημοσίευση (είδησης)

Italiano (Italian)
oscuramento, sospensione

Português (Portuguese)
n. - blecaute (m) (coloq.)
v. - escurecer completamente

Русский (Russian)
затемнение, провал памяти, затмение

Español (Spanish)
n. - apagón, censura, pérdida del conocimiento

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - mörkläggning, strömavbrott, blackout (med)
v. - mörklägga

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
灯火管制, 灯火熄灭, 暂时的意识丧失

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 燈火管制, 燈火熄滅, 暫時的意識喪失

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 장전, 암전, 일시적 의식 상실

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 灯火管制, 停電, 意識喪失, 暗転, 報道管制

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) اغماءة, فقدان الذاكرة, تعتيم (فعل) عتم, أغمى عليه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮האפלה (במלחמה), עלטה, כיבוי אורות, איפול, איבוד ההכרה‬


 
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