krypton
rms stands for root mean squared. rms voltage is a way of measuring a sort of average alterating current voltage as distinguished from peak-to-peak voltage. Likewise for ac rms current.
Rms is watts that's the amount of watts a speaker is rated for.
Yes, if it is set to measure AC, it is usually calibrated to RMS.
The ten most famous ocean liners of the 20th century include the following: the RMS Queen Mary II, the SS Rex, the SS France/SS Norway, the SS Bremen, the RMS Mauretania, the SS United States, the RMS Olympic, and the RMS Queen Elizabeth II.
"Watts RMS" is better represented as "Watts average". Since 1000 watts is 1kw you have "1000 watts average" and you can derive "1Kw average". So 1000 watts RMS will consume 1 Kw
250 m/s
Bridge rectifiers have higher rms values because the ripple factor low.
RMS watts is not a real measurement. The correct measurement is "average power", which is measured in "watts". It is dervied from RMS voltage, but that doesn't make it "RMS watts". "RMS watts" would be 22% higher than the correct "average watts".
rms means root mean square, or in a roundabout way the average. Therefore the average velocity or average speed (of a car?)
rms means root mean square, or in a roundabout way the average. Therefore the average velocity or average speed (of a car?)
It means root mean square. it is a notation for speed......
You don't need exactly one cycle data for computing the RMS value. It is just a convenient normalization. 1 cycle = 1Hz. RMS values can also be specified in 1 Mcycle, 1kcycle, even 2.39384kcycles. Again, 1 cycle is simply convenient. In other words, if the RMS value were specified in MHz, the RMS value will be 20*log(MHz/Hz) higher.
RMS
rms is the best because 1 RMS = 100 PMPO
A square wave has the highest RMS value. RMS value is simply root-mean-square, and since the square wave spends all of its time at one or the other peak value, then the RMS value is simply the peak value. If you want to quantify the RMS value of other waveforms, then you need to take the RMS of a series of equally spaced samples. You can use calculus to do this, or, for certain waveforms, you can use Cartwright, Kenneth V. 2007. In summary, the RMS value of a square wave of peak value a is a; the RMS value of a sine wave of peak value a is a divided by square root of 2; and the RMS value of a sawtooth wave of peak value a is a divided by cube root of 3; so, in order of decreasing RMS value, you have the square wave, the sine wave, and the sawtooth wave. For more information, please see the Related Link below.
RMS stands for "root mean square", and it represents an average of sorts. If you are interested in more technical details, or actually want to calculate RMS, the Wikipedia article on "root mean square" gives you a good overview. Note that for continuously changing values (as opposed to a few discrete measurements) this requires a knowledge of calculus, specifically integration.
When Normal Cruises, it has a top speed of 28.5 Knots but when it regained the blue riband of the atlantic , it reached 29.64 knots, 30 knots and 31.69 Knots