wave form
Sine wave is considered as the AC signal because it starts at 0 amplitude and it captures the alternating nature of the signal. Cosine wave is just a phase shift of the sine wave and represents the same signal. So, either sine or cosine wave can be used to represent AC signals. However, sine wave is more conventionally used.
The past form of "wave" is "waved."
It depends on how the generator is set up. Some will produce DC (Direct Current) and others will produce AC (Alternating Current). Where possible AC electricity will be produced as it runs through the grid without much loss of power.
Yes, a breaker can form before the wave approaches the beach. Breakers typically form when the wave's height exceeds the depth of the water, causing it to break and form whitecaps. This can happen before the wave reaches the shallow waters near the beach.
The plural possessive form of "wave" is "waves'".
No , an AC waveform goes to 0 60 times a second ( if its a 60 hz wave form )
AC in this context probably means Alternating Current. This kind of current changes direction 60 times per second. The variation in the direction of the current can be graphed in the form of a sine wave.
okay, where's the "given waveform"?
I m confuse in ques. Plz chng thd ques.
define the maximum value of an ac wave form
it is DC powered, but can generate sawtooth or triangular wave AC if wired up properly. it cannot generate sine wave AC, although with an opamp wave shaping circuit the triangular AC waveform can be reshaped to a rough approximation of a sine wave.
If its a triangular wave, its not DC, its AC, its just not sinusoidal. Can a transformer operate on triangular AC? Yes, but not as efficiently as on sinusoidal AC.
Sine wave is considered as the AC signal because it starts at 0 amplitude and it captures the alternating nature of the signal. Cosine wave is just a phase shift of the sine wave and represents the same signal. So, either sine or cosine wave can be used to represent AC signals. However, sine wave is more conventionally used.
Sine wave
mainly AC but can be DC if done correctly
An offset AC wave. It will be offset by the magnitude of the DC applied.
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.