No, a power plant that uses fossil fuels such as gas or coal, cannot be classified as a thermal power plant. A thermal power plant uses the heat from deep within the earth, combined with water to create steam, which then powers the turbines.
Any power plant that uses more than a single steam turbine as a prime mover. It could be a power plant, or a ship for instance. They use a compound gear train to get everything going the same way at the same time and at the same speed.
no it is not
Power is supplied to the governor from the engine's output shaft by a belt or chain connected to the lower belt wheel. The governor is connected to a throttle valve that regulates the flow of working fluid supplying the prime mover. As the speed of the prime mover increases, the central spindle of the governor rotates at a faster rate and the kinetic energy of the balls increases. This allows the two masses on lever arms to move outwards and upwards against gravity. If the motion goes far enough, this motion causes the lever arms to pull down on a thrust bearing, which moves a beam linkage, which reduces the aperture of a throttle valve. The rate of working-fluid entering the cylinder is thus reduced and the speed of the prime mover is controlled, preventing over-speeding.
The alignment of a pump is the process of making sure the pump shaft and prime mover (electric motor, engine,ect.)shaft are lined up perfect both horazonally and verticaly to ensure there is no binding on the coupling.
Dehumidifiers: between 1.05kw and up to 5kw for the big ones. Standard for those owned by restoration companies is 2.25kw. Air movers: between 0.45kw and up to about 0.9kw. Standard is 0.55kw. This is for the portable equipment, by the way. I don't know about the equipment that gets hard-wired into buildings.
The prime mover in a thermal system is the component that generates mechanical energy from heat. This can be a steam turbine, gas turbine, or combustion engine, depending on the specific system. The prime mover converts the thermal energy into rotational motion to produce electricity or drive machinery.
The arm of a generator is turned by a prime mover, such as a steam turbine, water turbine, or internal combustion engine. The motion provided by the prime mover is transferred to the armature through a shaft, causing it to rotate within the magnetic field of the stator which generates electricity.
The source for mechanical motion supplied to a generator is called a prime mover. This prime mover can be in the form of a steam turbine, gas turbine, water turbine, wind turbine, or internal combustion engine, which converts mechanical energy into electrical energy through the generator.
A prime mover is a machine which transforms energy to/from thermal or electrical, or pressure from/to mechanical form. Examples of a prime mover are engines or turbines.
Any type of 'prime mover' can be used -e.g. petrol or diesel engine, turbine, etc.
A thermal energy mover is a device or system that transfers thermal energy from one place to another. This could include devices like refrigerators, air conditioners, heat pumps, or any other system designed to move heat energy from one area to another.
A "prime mover" is part of a generator - specificially the thing that's causing the generator to spin (such as a turbine). It is called the prime mover because it is what is causing the generator's rotation.
A device that heats a home by removing thermal energy from one location and transferring it to another location is a heat mover. An example of a heat mover is a refrigerator.
A heat engine converts heat into mechanical energy, typically by using the heat to produce steam and drive a turbine. A heat mover, on the other hand, transfers heat from one place to another, such as in a refrigerator or air conditioner, by using a refrigerant to absorb and release heat through a thermodynamic cycle.
Heat engines like your lawn mover or car a combustion engine.
It removes thermal energy on what ever you place on the refrigerator. The first principle is transfer of heat, the second is solidification or vapourization.
In a hydro power plant, the prime mover is the water that flows through the plant and drives the turbines. The force of the flowing water turns the turbines, which then convert this kinetic energy into mechanical energy to generate electricity.