
EBK PRINCIPLES OF ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780134880068
Author: Buchla
Publisher: VST
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
thumb_up100%
Chapter 2, Problem 1PQ
What is the charge in coulombs of the nucleus of a copper atom?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
electric plants.
Draw the lighting, socket, telephone, TV, and doorbell installations on the given single-story project with an architectural plan by hand writing
A circularly polarized wave, traveling in the +z-direction, is received by an elliptically
polarized antenna whose reception characteristics near the main lobe are given approx-
imately by
E„ = [2â, + jâ‚]ƒ(r. 8, 4)
Find the polarization loss factor PLF (dimensionless and in dB) when the incident wave
is
(a) right-hand (CW)
An elliptically polarized wave traveling in the negative z-direction is received by a circularly polarized
antenna. The vector describing the polarization of the incident wave is given by Ei= 2ax + jay.Find the
polarization loss factor PLF (dimensionless and in dB) when the wave that would be transmitted by the
antenna is (a) right-hand CP
jX(1)=j0.2p.u.
jXa(2)=j0.15p.u.
jxa(0)=0.15 p.u.
V₁=1/0°p.u.
V₂=1/0° p.u.
1
jXr(1) = j0.15 p.11.
jXT(2) = j0.15 p.u.
jXr(0) = j0.15 p.u.
V3=1/0° p.u.
А
V4=1/0° p.u.
2 jX1(1)=j0.12 p.u. 3 jX2(1)=j0.15 p.u. 4
jX1(2)=0.12 p.11.
JX1(0)=0.3 p.u.
jX/2(2)=j0.15 p.11.
X2(0)=/0.25 p.1.
Figure 1. Circuit for Q3 b).
Chapter 2 Solutions
EBK PRINCIPLES OF ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
Ch. 2 - How many coulombs do 93.8 1016 electrons...Ch. 2 - How much energy is required to move 50 C from one...Ch. 2 - If there are 2.0 A of current through the filament...Ch. 2 - A certain resistor has a yellow first band, a...Ch. 2 - A certain resistor has a yellow first band, a...Ch. 2 - What is the resistance indicated by 1K25?Ch. 2 - What is the cross-sectional area of a 0.0015 in....Ch. 2 - Use Table 2-3 to determine the resistance of 100...Ch. 2 - Related Problem In Figure 257 the switch is moved...Ch. 2 - The number of protons in the nucleus is the atomic...
Ch. 2 - The outermost shell of an atom contains the...Ch. 2 - Silicon and germanium are classed as insulators.Ch. 2 - The unit of charge is ampere.Ch. 2 - Like charges repel.Ch. 2 - Coulombs law shows the relationship of the energy...Ch. 2 - A battery stores charge.Ch. 2 - An ideal voltage source can provide a constant...Ch. 2 - A volt can be defined in terms of energy per...Ch. 2 - A fuel cell combines a fuel with an oxidizer to...Ch. 2 - The unit of current is coulomb.Ch. 2 - In a 5-band precision resistor, the fourth band is...Ch. 2 - A resistor with a single black band represents...Ch. 2 - A resistor labeled 0R1 is 1 ohm.Ch. 2 - A rheostat performs the same function as a...Ch. 2 - A strain gauge changes resistance in response to...Ch. 2 - Prob. 17TFQCh. 2 - A circular mil is a unit of area.Ch. 2 - The three basic measurements that can be done by a...Ch. 2 - If a GFCI breaker detects a difference in the hot...Ch. 2 - A neutral atom with an atomic number of three has...Ch. 2 - Electron orbits are called 1. shells 2. nuclei 3....Ch. 2 - Materials in which there is no current when...Ch. 2 - When placed close together, a positively charged...Ch. 2 - The charge on a single electron is 1. 6.25 1018 C...Ch. 2 - Potential difference is another term for 1. energy...Ch. 2 - The unit of energy is the 1. watt 2. coulomb 3....Ch. 2 - Which one of the following is not a type of energy...Ch. 2 - Which one of the following is not a possible...Ch. 2 - Electrical current is defined as 1. the reciprocal...Ch. 2 - There is no current in a circuit when 1. a switch...Ch. 2 - The primary purpose of a resistor is to 1....Ch. 2 - Wire resistance depends on the 1. type of material...Ch. 2 - Potentiometers and rheostats are types of 1....Ch. 2 - The current in a given circuit is not to exceed 22...Ch. 2 - The neutral line in a ac utility should 1. have...Ch. 2 - What is the charge in coulombs of the nucleus of a...Ch. 2 - What is the charge in coulombs of the nucleus of a...Ch. 2 - How many coulombs of charge do 50 1031 electrons...Ch. 2 - How many electrons does it take to make 80 C...Ch. 2 - Determine the voltage in each of the following...Ch. 2 - Five hundred joules of energy are used to move 100...Ch. 2 - What is the voltage of a battery that uses 24 J of...Ch. 2 - How much energy does a 12 V battery use to move...Ch. 2 - If a resistor with a current of 20 mA through it...Ch. 2 - List four common sources of voltage.Ch. 2 - Upon what principle is electrical generators...Ch. 2 - How does and electronic power supply differ from...Ch. 2 - A certain current source provides 100 mA to a 1 k...Ch. 2 - Determine the current in each of the following...Ch. 2 - Six-tenths coulomb passes a point in 3 s. What is...Ch. 2 - How long does it take 10 C to flow past a point if...Ch. 2 - How many coulombs pass a point in 0.1 s when the...Ch. 2 - 5.74 1017 electrons flow through a wire in 250...Ch. 2 - Find the conductance for each of the following...Ch. 2 - Find the resistance corresponding to the following...Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance values and tolerance for...Ch. 2 - Find the minimum and the maximum resistance within...Ch. 2 - Determine the color bands for each of the...Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance and tolerance of each of...Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance and percent tolerance for...Ch. 2 - From the selection of resistors in Figure 267,...Ch. 2 - Determine the color bands for each of the...Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance and tolerance of each of...Ch. 2 - Determine the color bands for each of the...Ch. 2 - The adjustable contact of a linear potentiometer...Ch. 2 - What resistance is indicated by 4K7?Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance and tolerance of each...Ch. 2 - Trace the current path in Figure 268(a) with the...Ch. 2 - With the switch in either position, redraw the...Ch. 2 - There is only one circuit in Figure 268 in which...Ch. 2 - In Figure 268, determine which (if any) circuits...Ch. 2 - In Figure 268, determine which (if any) circuits...Ch. 2 - Through which resistor in Figure 269 is there...Ch. 2 - Devise a switch arrangement whereby two voltage...Ch. 2 - Show how a single switch can be used to connect a...Ch. 2 - Show the placement of an ammeter and a voltmeter...Ch. 2 - Prob. 42PQCh. 2 - In Figure 271, how much voltage does each meter...Ch. 2 - In Figure 271, indicate how to connect an ammeter...Ch. 2 - In Figure 269, show the proper placement of...Ch. 2 - Show the proper placement of voltmeters to measure...Ch. 2 - What is the voltage reading of the meter in Figure...Ch. 2 - How much resistance is the ohmmeter in Figure...Ch. 2 - Determine the resistance indicated by each of the...Ch. 2 - What is the maximum resolution of a 4-digit DMM?Ch. 2 - Indicate how you would connect the multimeter in...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, electrical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- can you show me full workings for this problem. the solution is - v0 = 10i2 = 2.941 volts, i0 = i1 – i2 = (5/3)i2 = 490.2mA.arrow_forwardQ4. a) Consider a transmission line modelled as a four-terminal network with an unknown configuration. You are provided with the following measured parameters at the operating frequency: Open-circuit voltage ratio: 0.9521° • Short-circuit impedance: 40+j80 • Open-circuit admittance: -j2 × 10-4 S Use the four terminal equations and the provided measurements to mathematically derive the A, B, C, and D parameters of the network and explain their physical significance. Show your work and formulas used in the derivation.arrow_forwardQ1. Consider a single-phase step-down transformer with primary and secondary turns of 600 and 100 respectively and a primary voltage of 11 kV. (i) An open circuit test was conducted on the transformer and the primary current was measured as: I₁ = 2.20 A Use these results to calculate the magnetising reactance in the equivalent circuit (X) given that Rm, representing the core loss, has a value of 21 km. (ii) The remaining equivalent circuit parameters are as follows: R₁ = 40, X₁ = 25 N, R₂ = 0.4 N, X₂ = 0.3 N Draw the complete simplified equivalent circuit, by referring series components on the primary side to the secondary, giving all component values. (iii) The transformer is connected, on its secondary side, to a load of 10 at a power factor of 1. Calculate the voltage across the load. (iv) Calculate the efficiency of the transformer when operating at the load given in part (iii).arrow_forward
- b) A 132 kV supply feeds a line of reactance 15 which is connected to a 100 MVA, 132/33 kV transformer of 0.08 p.u. reactance as shown in the Figure 2. The transformer feeds a 33 kV line of reactance 8 Q, which, in turn, is connected to a 75 MVA, 33/11 KV transformer of 0.12 p.u. reactance. The transformer supplies an 11 KV substation from which a local 11 kV feeder of 4 Q reactance is supplied. T1 T2 132 kV 33 kV 11 kV Fault X CB Relay Figure 2. Network for Q4 b). (i) Given the system base of 100 MVA, compute the total equivalent reactance of the radial circuit in per unit (p.u.). (ii) Determine the three-phase fault current at the load end of the 11 kV feeder, assuming a fault impedance of 0.05 Q. Calculate the fault current in Amperes. (iii) The 11 kV feeder connects to a protective overcurrent relay via 200/5 A current transformers. This relay has a standard normally inverse IDMT characteristic, with a setting current of 3 A and a time multiplier setting of 0.4. Calculate the…arrow_forwardQ2. a) Two three-phase transformers, designated A and B, have the following secondary equivalent circuit parameters per phase: R₁ = 0.002 Q, XA = 0.03 Q, RB = 0.004 Q, X = 0.012 Q Transformer A is 250 kVA and transformer B is 450 kVA. Calculate how they share a load of 650 KVA when connected in parallel (assume the voltage ratios are equal) b) A step-up transformer is being specified for the beginning of a 3-phase, 4 wire high voltage transmission line. Discuss your recommendation for the configuration of the transformer connections on both the primary and secondary side of the transformer. c) Define power system protection and describe its fundamental purpose. Discuss the following key concepts including discrimination, stability, speed of operation, sensitivity, and reliability in the context of the power system protection components and schemes.arrow_forwardQ3. a) Given the unsymmetrical phasors for a three-phase system, they can be represented in terms of their symmetrical components as follows: [Fa] [1 1 Fb = 1 a² [Fc. 11[Fao] a Fai 1 a a2F a2- where F stands for any three-phase quantity. Conversely, the sequence components can be derived from the unsymmetrical phasors as: [11 1] [Fal Faol Fa1 = 1 a a² F 1 a² a a2. Given the unbalanced three-phase voltages: V₁ = 120/10° V, V₂ = 200/110° V, V = 240/200° V Calculate in polar form the sequence components of the voltage.arrow_forward
- Complete the table of values for this circuit:arrow_forward*P2.58. Solve for the node voltages shown in Figure P2.58. - 10 Ω w + 10 Ω 15 Ω w w '+' 5 Ω 20x 1 A Figure P2.58 w V2 502 12Aarrow_forwardAn 18.65 kW, 4-pole, 50 Hz, 3-phase induction motor has friction and windage losses of 2.5% of the output. The full-load slip is 4%. Find for full-load (i) the rotor cu loss (ii) the rotor input power (iii) the output torque.arrow_forward
- Q1: Consider the finite state machine logic implementation in Fig. shown below: a. b. Construct the state diagram. Repeat the circuit design using j-k flip flop. C'lk A D 10 Clk Q D 32 Cik O 31 Please solve the question on a sheet of paper by hand and explain everything related to the question step by step.arrow_forwardAnot ined sove in peaper S PU +96 An 18.65 kW, 4-pole, 50 Hz, 3-phase induction motor has friction and windage losses of 2.5% of the output. The full-load slip is 4 %. Find for full-load (i) the rotor cu loss (ii) the rotor input power (iii) the output torque. 750 1 T el Marrow_forwardAlternator has star-connected,4-pole, 50 Hz as the following data: Flux per pole-0.12 Wb; No. of slot/pole/phase=4; conductor/slot=4; Each coil spans 150° (electrical degree) pitches Find (i) number of turns per phase (ii) distribution factor (iii) pitch factor (iv) no-load phase voltage (v) no-load line voltage.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Delmar's Standard Textbook Of ElectricityElectrical EngineeringISBN:9781337900348Author:Stephen L. HermanPublisher:Cengage LearningElectricity for Refrigeration, Heating, and Air C...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781337399128Author:Russell E. SmithPublisher:Cengage Learning

Delmar's Standard Textbook Of Electricity
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9781337900348
Author:Stephen L. Herman
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Electricity for Refrigeration, Heating, and Air C...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781337399128
Author:Russell E. Smith
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Tutorial: Photoconductivity; Author: MIT OpenCourseWare;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20GlFVyxqHY;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
photoconductive cell; Author: Electronics Engineering;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bxo3v_5QGaA;License: Standard Youtube License