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as a voltage is applied across a capacitor charges accumulate on the plates.due to accumulation of charges,electric field between the plates develop in the direction opposite to the applied field.this field give rise to the potential across the plates.if the plates get completely charged due to the applied voltage i.e if the whole of the charge q=c(capacitance of the capacitors)xv(voltage applied) develops on the plates,then the applied voltage wiil be opposed to an extent that no further charges will induce on it.But in practice,it takes very long time for the capacitor to get completely charged due to the applied voltage..............now coming to ac circuits,having capacitor.......if the frequency of ac applied voltage is less then the voltage will change slowly.due to this at each instant large amount of charge will develop on the plates causing large opposition.vice versa to high frequency applied voltage.
There will be a change in the area/volume, depending on the direction of the force applied.
define inherent powers and give an example Is the increase in voltage causes a greater electric resistance in a circuit? No, the resistance in a circuit does not change when voltage changes.
When the forces on an object are unbalanced the changes that could happen are the object speeds up, or slows down. And it can changes direction.
-600vdc
If all environmental conditions remain constant then the resistance will not change appreciably with applied voltage, but the current will increase. An increase in current will raise the temperature of the conductor which will increase the resistance somewhat.
A voltage is applied to a signal line. The voltage of the line changes gradually from 0 to +V. The "edge speed" is the rate of change of voltage of the line. A voltage is applied to a signal line. The voltage of the line changes gradually from 0 to +V. The "edge speed" is the rate of change of voltage of the line.
change in load voltage or output voltage changes in load current
Usually the voltage remains the same no matter what time frame that it is used in. What ever the manufacturer states that the working voltage is, that should be the voltage that is applied to the equipment. From the time the fan starts up until the fan shuts down the voltage value does not appreciably change.
no
Yes and no. As voltage changes, current changes, causing power to change, with the end result that temperature changes. Most resistors have a small temperature coefficient, so their resistance will change slightly as the voltage changes.
Voltage is equal to the Current multiplied by the Resistance.Without changing the resistance, increasing the applied voltage in a circuit will increase current flow. There is a simple, direct relationship between voltage and current. Double the voltage, twice the current will flow. Triple the voltage, and the current will triple. As voltage (E) equals current (I) times resistance (R), when resistance is fixed, what happens to voltage will happen to current.
It changes the direction of an applied force.
When a dc supply is connected to a resistor, current flows. The current in amps is equal to the supply voltage divided by the resistance in ohms. The power used is the voltage times the current, and that appears as heat in the resistor, which might become hot to touch.
as a voltage is applied across a capacitor charges accumulate on the plates.due to accumulation of charges,electric field between the plates develop in the direction opposite to the applied field.this field give rise to the potential across the plates.if the plates get completely charged due to the applied voltage i.e if the whole of the charge q=c(capacitance of the capacitors)xv(voltage applied) develops on the plates,then the applied voltage wiil be opposed to an extent that no further charges will induce on it.But in practice,it takes very long time for the capacitor to get completely charged due to the applied voltage..............now coming to ac circuits,having capacitor.......if the frequency of ac applied voltage is less then the voltage will change slowly.due to this at each instant large amount of charge will develop on the plates causing large opposition.vice versa to high frequency applied voltage.
Drain-to-source breakdown voltage (BVdss) should not change appreciably until the gate-to-source voltage (Vgs) approaches the device's threshold voltage (Vth). In that case, the drain to source voltage becomes the product of the drain-to-source current (Ids) and the device's on-state resistance (Rds-on) at the given Vgs.
Changes in load causes the load current to change, resulting in changes in voltage drop along conductors. This means that the 'receiving end' voltage will vary.