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It depends on how the capacitor is connected and whether the supply voltage is a.c. or d.c. Assuming you are talking about a power-factor improvement capacitor (connected in parallel with an inductive load, supplied with a.c.), then the supply current will reduce.
It will decrease the effective load resistance across the power supply terminals, increase the total current through the load, and increase the total power required to be supplied by the power supply.
The supply won't have to work as hard. It is perfectly acceptable, for example, to use a 1A, 12v supply to supply a 12v, .5A load. The current rating indicates the ability of the supply to dissipate heat caused by the current flowing. If the load current is above the power supply current rating, the power supply will overheat.
By a current pump you might mean an electronic circuit using transistors or an IC. These circuits often do not take a wrong supply very well and it might be destroyed.
A 24 volt DC power supply provides DC amps, not AC amps. You cannot draw 1.8 amps AC from a DC power supply, without some kind of inverter stage.That is the answer to the specific wording of the question. Now the answer to the question I think was originally intended...If 1.8 amps AC is being supplied to a 24 volt DC power supply, what would the current supplied by the power supply be?Power is volts times amps, so power supplied to the power supply is 120 VAC (assumed) times 1.8 amps, or 216 watts. If the power supply is 100% efficient, then the power input equals the power output, so use the some equation to take 216 watts and divide by 24 volts, and you get 9 amps.Keep in mind, this is ideal state, assuming 100% efficiency, and no real power supply will be that.
The past tense of "supply" is "supplied."
Voltage Standby
It depends on how the capacitor is connected and whether the supply voltage is a.c. or d.c. Assuming you are talking about a power-factor improvement capacitor (connected in parallel with an inductive load, supplied with a.c.), then the supply current will reduce.
The base word of supplied is supply.
Standby current is the current that a device draws when it is not actively performing its function. This current would be measured in amperage, and commonly amperes, milliamperes or microamperes would be the units of measurement. As an example of a device drawing standby current; a radio transmitter may not be actively transmitting, but the power supply is turned on, and the transmitter is ready to operate. In this case, the transmitter is drawing very little power. A computer can be in standby mode and drawing "standby current" , examples of which are also "hibernation" and "sleep" modes. The computer display and hard disk drives are turned off, and the CPU is throttled down to low power state. However, memory is kept active, which requires just a small amount of battery power.
Standby current is the current that a device draws when it is not actively performing its function. This current would be measured in amperage, and commonly amperes, milliamperes or microamperes would be the units of measurement. As an example of a device drawing standby current; a radio transmitter may not be actively transmitting, but the power supply is turned on, and the transmitter is ready to operate. In this case, the transmitter is drawing very little power. A computer can be in standby mode and drawing "standby current" , examples of which are also "hibernation" and "sleep" modes. The computer display and hard disk drives are turned off, and the CPU is throttled down to low power state. However, memory is kept active, which requires just a small amount of battery power.
Supplied is the past participle of supply.
Supplied
Supply means ,A fundamental economic concept that describes the total amount of a specific good or service that is available to consumers. Quantity supplied is a change in price along the supply curvereffers to the ammount of goods and services producers are able and willing to put on the market for sale at a given price in a given period of timeQuantity Supplied : The ammount of goods producers are willing to put on the market at a given price
The word "developed" is slightly odd in this context. If the power supply provides a current to some instrument or device, the power supplied is the voltage multiplied by the current. The power supply will also consume some power itself to do this job. The total power consumed (provided to the power supply) equals the input current multiplied by the input voltage.
A change in supply means that the supply curve has shifted. With a stable demand, this will result in a change in the quantity supplied but also a change in price. A change in only quantity supplied without a change in supply would require a horizontal supply curve. Alternatively a change in quantity supplied and price may occur if there is a shift of the demand curve.
This is how an induction motor normally works, hence the name. The supply voltage is connected to the stator winding(s) and a current is induced in the rotor. A synchronous motor, on the other hand, will have current supplied to the rotor through slip rings and brushes. The rotor current is generally supplied as DC though, or else rectified in the rotor.