ratio of secondry voltage to primary voltage is called voltage transformation ratio
ratio of secondry voltage to primary voltage is called voltage transformation ratio
The ratio of output windings to input windings determines the ratio of output voltage to input voltage. The ratio of current is the inverse.
The ratio of RB1 to RBBO is the intrinsic standoff ratio. It is the standoff voltage ratio to the power supply voltage.
Current gain is the ratio of output current divided by input current. Voltage gain is the ratio of output voltage divided by input voltage. Nothing more complicated than that.
It's approximately the inverse of the voltage- or turns-ratio:
line transformation ratio would be the turns ratio (ie voltage ratio), while the phase transformation ratio is most probably the phase shift introduced by a 3 phase transformer.
The turns ratio of a transformer is the number of primary turns to secondary turns. This defines how the transformer will change the voltage and current. For N1 primary turns, and N2 secondary turns, N1/N2 will be the turns ratio; the secondary voltage will be:the primary voltage x (N2/N1); The secondary current will be:primary current x (N1/N2)
ratio of secondry voltage to primary voltage is called voltage transformation ratio
Yes.Source transformation in dependent voltage source can be solved the same like independent voltage source
For an ideal transformer, the voltage ratio is the same as its turns ratio.
The ratio of output windings to input windings determines the ratio of output voltage to input voltage. The ratio of current is the inverse.
Voltage gain is the ratio of the output voltage of an amplifier to its input voltage.
Secondary voltage / primary voltage
The ratio of RB1 to RBBO is the intrinsic standoff ratio. It is the standoff voltage ratio to the power supply voltage.
The voltage ratio of a potential, or voltage, transformer (PT or VT) depends upon the primary voltage to which it is connected. Accordingly, its voltage ratio varies considerably, as there is huge variety of system voltages throughout the world.Typically a VT's secondary voltage is standardised at 110 V which will match the full-scale deflection of a voltmeter connected to it (although it can also supply protective relays), while its primary voltage is then matched to the voltage of the system to which it is connected: in the UK, for example:11-kV:110 V33-kV:110 Vetc.
VSWR = voltage standing wave ratio = ratio of the maximum voltage to minimum on a line = VSWR = Emax / Emin = Imax / Imin Reflection Coefficient is the ratio of reflected voltage to incident voltage. = ZL - ZO / ZL + ZO
voltage to current ratio is called resistance. it is d opposition offered to d flow of charges.........