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Owen Duffy wrote:
. . . Thinking that through further brings a third case to the "ONLY" conditions, and that is if the circuit is entirely resistive (eg real power is the product of Vrms and Irms if the waveform is square and the circuit contains only resistances). If you look at the definition of average (as in my previous posting), you'll see that when the load is purely resistive, average power = 1/T * the integral over T of v^2(t) / R dt or 1/T * the integral over T of i^2(t) * R dt, for any waveform. And using the definition of RMS(*), you can see that this is exactly Vrms^2 / R or Irms^2 * R respectively, again for any waveform. So Pavg = Vrms * Irms for any waveform, as long as (and only as long as) the load is purely resistive. Again, the average and RMS values can be calculated for any interval (as long as they're the same), but a single cycle is adequate to determine the long-term average and RMS values of periodic waveforms. (*) frms = Sqrt(avg(f^2(t))) = Sqrt(1/T * integral over T of f^2(t) dt) Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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