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inductance

[ UK /ɪndˈʌktəns/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈdəktəns/ ]
NOUN
  1. an electrical device (typically a conducting coil) that introduces inductance into a circuit
  2. an electrical phenomenon whereby an electromotive force (EMF) is generated in a closed circuit by a change in the flow of current

How To Use inductance In A Sentence

  • Currents in resistance / inductance circuits always decay exponentially, not linearly, after the power source is switched off.
  • Inductance coils were placed around the chest and abdomen of each animal.
  • They proposed three hypotheses for why the membrane potential reverses during a spike: Anion hypothesis: the active membrane becomes selectively permeable to anions which are present in the axoplasm, but are in low or zero concentration in sea water; Inductance hypothesis: the membrane plays the role of an inductor. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • He had learned that an inductance coil was a closed circuit with no current of its own.
  • The correlation between mutual inductance and self-inductance results from the equations (5.13) and (5.15.) with L = N2/Rm we have M2 = k2L1L2 5. Magnetic Field
  • In actual operation the measuring coil has resistance, inductance and distributed capacitance.
  • One of many interesting alternative ways of measuring mutual inductance uses any bridge that measures self inductance together with the following technique.
  • Based on inductance models, the universal analytical models on synchronously revolving magnetic suspension force were derived.
  • The latter equation indicates that, in a current-carrying coil, an electromotive force is induced by the magnetic flux associated with the current in the coil; the magnitude of the electromotive force is proportional to the rate of current change DI/Dt. The proportionality factor is called inductance L (more precisely self-inductance). 5. Magnetic Field
  • If current is decreasing, inductance will cause the current to decrease more slowly.
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