Please see it for yourself.
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Phasors are agnostic with regard to magnitude or RMS (or peak-to-peak, for that matter). The only differences are a scale factor, so it is important to know which convention is being used. Since these are linear circuits, you can assume one convention, work the problem, and then adjust afterwards if you find out a different convention is used (but remember that power is NOT a linear relationship, so you have to know what convention is being used to get the correct answer).It's given as phasors and hence Vm, not Vrms.
PS: One of the given ones is answer. Please see the attachment.
The only thing you can go from in that case is how phasors have been used in your text and in the course. If they have always referred to amplitude, then work it with them as amplitude. If that doesn't result in a result that matches what's offered, then work it assuming RMS values. The worst situation is if the author worked it both ways for the purpose of offering up detractors that you would get if you make the wrong assumption -- but then the author/instructor should have made efforts to emphasize that phasors are always to be interpreted a certain way.Please see it for yourself.
Hello again,It's given as phasors and hence Vm, not Vrms.
PS: One of the given ones is answer. Please see the attachment.
HI,Thank you.
1. What kind of component does the 0.7*j represent?
Reactive
2. What do we know about that (#1) kind of component as far as power dissipation goes?
Reactive components, capacitor or inductor, don't dissipate any energy, ideally.
3. What is the only component (out of a choice of R, L, or C) that dissipates power?
R
4. How do we calculate power in that (#3) kind of component?
S=(I²_rms)(Z)=P+jQ. In case of R, it becomes S=(I²_rms)(R)=P
Reactive power#1, can you be more specific? Choices: R, L, or C.
Nope!Did you get the right answer then?
Thank you.The only thing you can go from in that case is how phasors have been used in your text and in the course. If they have always referred to amplitude, then work it with them as amplitude. If that doesn't result in a result that matches what's offered, then work it assuming RMS values. The worst situation is if the author worked it both ways for the purpose of offering up detractors that you would get if you make the wrong assumption -- but then the author/instructor should have made efforts to emphasize that phasors are always to be interpreted a certain way.
Hello again,Reactive power
Nope!
Hi,Sorry, it got mixed up.
The part "0.7j" represents an inductive reactance.
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The impedance is inductive when X is positive or capacitive when X is negative. Therefore, impedance Z = R + jX is said to be inductive or lagging since current lags voltage, while impedance Z = R - jX is capacitive or leading because current leads voltage.
Note that impedance is not a phasor.
Thank you.
PS: The problem has already be solved. Please check my previous posting. Thanks.
There are 12(1000 kΩ) in 12 MΩ of resistance.If you have 12 MΩ of resistance, how many kΩ do you have? How did you convert from MΩ to kΩ?