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It means that an electronic circuit is designed in such a way that a 1 is represented by a HIGH voltage, and a 0 is represented by a LOW voltage. Also known as active-high. If it's the other way round, it's called active-low, or negative logic.
It is not based on the area really... basically for each photo voltaic cell they have a certain voltage, if you connect them in series such as -------0-------0----------0---------0--- then it will increase the voltage 4fold but not the amplitude if they are connected in parallel then amplitude will increase but not voltage. Usually panels have a mix of both to get a good voltage and amplitude |--------0-----| |--------0-----| |-------0------| |------0-------| |------0-------|
The dimensional formula of absolute temperature is [M^0 L^0 T^0 K^1], where M represents mass, L represents length, T represents time, and K represents temperature.
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In an electrical circuit, the neutral wire typically has a voltage of around 0 volts.
Good? You need to be more specific - computer (API) changes what you see on the screen to - readable computer language, machine or binary. Which has two choices on or off or 0 or 1 or positive vs negative (or plain English is the light off or on). Her is a better question: A digital signal composed of a pulse of positive voltage represents an 1 or a positive.
Computers are built off of electronic circuits, in which there is either no voltage or there is some positive number (usually 3.3V, 5V or 12V). 1 represents an electric charge while 0 represents no charge.
It means that an electronic circuit is designed in such a way that a 1 is represented by a HIGH voltage, and a 0 is represented by a LOW voltage. Also known as active-high. If it's the other way round, it's called active-low, or negative logic.
Voltage dividers can provide anything between VCC (the most positive voltage in the circuit) and VSS (the most negative voltage in the circuit). For example, if VCC =0 and VSS = -15, then the output voltage has to be negative. ========================
You will need a regulator circuit that will change the shape of the pulse AND regulate the voltage to 5v.
Zero represents any value in algebra. This includes positive or negative numbers.
In Positive logic, we all assume that the more positive (binary) voltage state is One, the less positive voltage state is Zero.Both voltage states could be positive, both could be negative, or they could be opposite polarities.
The ISBN of The Pulse - comics - is 0-785-11332-0.
In digital circuits, a voltage level represents the binary values of 0 & 1. Each circuit can be different, but it might be 0 volts & 5 volts, for example.
It's a sine wave (if there is no distortion). Voltage is zero at 0 degrees, at its positive peak at 90 degrees, back to zero at 180 degrees, at its negative peak at 270 degrees, and back to zero at 360 degrees.
The VFD outputs pulses at the DC bus voltage. Each pulse is from the DC bus and the voltage does not change. It is the average voltage that changes because the VFD changes the on and off times of these pulses. For a lower average ac voltage to the motor, the ON time is small and the OFF time is large. The VFD actually pulses about 4000 times per second, so the motor does not really know these are just lots of quick DC bus voltage pulses. To simulate an ac waveform, the VFD uses pulse-width modulation which means the pulse ON time at the peak of the simulated sinewave is longer, or fatter, than the pulses where the simulated sinewave is closer to 0 crossing.
Neither. It represents "nothing" Zero is neither a positive or negative number. It is just plain zero. So you don't have to stress on remembering if it's a plus or minus! :0) neither 0 is neither negative nor positive. Zero is neither positive nor negative.