70.7
When you say holdhold supply of 230volts, you are referring to the RMS value, not the peak value.
To find the root mean square (rms) value for a voltage given in peak-to-peak (Vpp), you need to divide the Vpp value by 2√2. In this case, the Vpp is 300mV, which is equivalent to 0.3V. Dividing 0.3V by 2√2 ≈ 2.828, the rms value is approximately 0.106 V.
It is the highest value of the amplitude, called the peak value. Scroll down to related links and look at "RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage". Look at the figure in the middle below the headline "RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage".
For a 12V peak voltage (V_peak), the peak-to-peak value (V_pp) is 24V, as it is twice the peak voltage (V_pp = 2 * V_peak). The root mean square (RMS) value is approximately 8.49V, calculated as V_rms = V_peak / √2. The half-cycle average voltage is about 7.64V, calculated as V_avg = (V_peak / π).
The average voltage is the rms voltage.Volts peak = volts RMS times 1.414Volts RMS = volts peak times 0.7071Use the link below to an RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage calculator.********************************The average voltage is not the r.m.s. voltage.The average voltage of a sine wave is 0.636 x the peak value. Conversely, peak voltage is 1.57 the mean or average.
Peak voltage will be 1.414 times the RMS. Peak to Peak voltage, assuming no DC offset, will be 2 x 1.414 x the RMS value.
ANSWER: The peak to peak voltage can be found by multiplying 120 v AC x 2.82= 339.41
When you say holdhold supply of 230volts, you are referring to the RMS value, not the peak value.
To find the root mean square (rms) value for a voltage given in peak-to-peak (Vpp), you need to divide the Vpp value by 2√2. In this case, the Vpp is 300mV, which is equivalent to 0.3V. Dividing 0.3V by 2√2 ≈ 2.828, the rms value is approximately 0.106 V.
P-P voltage = RMS voltage * 2 * sqrt (2)Here's an example: house voltage is 120VRMS, which is actually ~169 volts peak - neutral. double this will give peak to peak value.
Conversions of RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage. That are the used voltages. The expression "average" voltage is used for RMS voltage.Scroll down to related links and seach for "RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage".Answer'Average' is not the same as 'root mean square'. As the average value of a sinusoidal voltage is zero, you cannot convert it to a peak-to-peak value.
It is the highest value of the amplitude, called the peak value. Scroll down to related links and look at "RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage". Look at the figure in the middle below the headline "RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage".
For a 12V peak voltage (V_peak), the peak-to-peak value (V_pp) is 24V, as it is twice the peak voltage (V_pp = 2 * V_peak). The root mean square (RMS) value is approximately 8.49V, calculated as V_rms = V_peak / √2. The half-cycle average voltage is about 7.64V, calculated as V_avg = (V_peak / π).
The average voltage is the rms voltage.Volts peak = volts RMS times 1.414Volts RMS = volts peak times 0.7071Use the link below to an RMS voltage, peak voltage and peak-to-peak voltage calculator.********************************The average voltage is not the r.m.s. voltage.The average voltage of a sine wave is 0.636 x the peak value. Conversely, peak voltage is 1.57 the mean or average.
The same as in single phase with the same RMS voltage.
100v divided by 1.41
Assuming "quoted value" to be RMS value, or average, [what you would see on a meter], the peak would be that value times 1.414. Going backward, peak times .707 is RMS.