The two sources add together, imposing a DC bias to the AC source.
With an AC and a DC voltage source in series, the DC voltage can be added to the RMS value of the AC voltage to give the effective voltage.
A: AC recitification and battery source.
we will get rectified voltage at the output.in case we replaced the DC source with AC source
The voltage is greater than the applied voltage, why?
ummmmm... put it in series.
With an AC and a DC voltage source in series, the DC voltage can be added to the RMS value of the AC voltage to give the effective voltage.
For part of the AC voltage wave, the capacitor will be above the source voltage, and will discharge until the AC voltage wave increases above the capacitor's stored voltage.
There's no correlation between the voltage, the current, and whether the source is AC or DC.
A: AC recitification and battery source.
we will get rectified voltage at the output.in case we replaced the DC source with AC source
The voltage is greater than the applied voltage, why?
the sum of the two
ummmmm... put it in series.
The maximum value of the current in an AC circuit depends on the frequency of the voltage source. As the frequency increases, the maximum current value also increases.
A reactor in an AC circuit is basically an inductor which will filter spikes in source voltage. See the related link.
Voltage dividers are used in a linear circuit to separate the input voltage into a small portion known as the output voltage. It is commonly used to get a low voltage signal equal to the voltage being measured.
A diode is a "one-way valve" that allows electrical current to flow in only one direction. A diode placed in series between an AC voltage source and a resistive load will allow current to flow through the load in one direction and block the current when the polarity of the AC voltage changes.