enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Capacitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor

    Large capacitor banks (reservoir) are used as energy sources for the exploding-bridgewire detonators or slapper detonators in nuclear weapons and other specialty weapons. Experimental work is under way using banks of capacitors as power sources for electromagnetic armour and electromagnetic railguns and coilguns.

  3. Farad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farad

    The capacitance of a capacitor is one farad when one coulomb of charge changes the potential between the plates by one volt. [1] [2] Equally, one farad can be described as the capacitance which stores a one-coulomb charge across a potential difference of one volt. [3] The relationship between capacitance, charge, and potential difference is linear.

  4. Capacitance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitance

    Combining the equation for capacitance with the above equation for the energy stored in a capacitor, for a flat-plate capacitor the energy stored is: = =. where is the energy, in joules; is the capacitance, in farads; and is the voltage, in volts.

  5. List of textbooks in electromagnetism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_textbooks_in...

    In addition, there are popular physics textbooks that include electricity and magnetism among the material they cover, such as David Halliday and Robert Resnick's Fundamentals of Physics. Feynman RP , Leighton RB , Sands M , Electromagnetism and Matter , Basic Books , 2010.

  6. Capacitor types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_types

    Capacitors for AC applications are primarily film capacitors, metallized paper capacitors, ceramic capacitors and bipolar electrolytic capacitors. The rated AC load for an AC capacitor is the maximum sinusoidal effective AC current (rms) which may be applied continuously to a capacitor within the specified temperature range.

  7. Applications of capacitors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applications_of_capacitors

    Large capacitor banks (reservoirs) are used as energy sources for the exploding-bridgewire detonators or slapper detonators in nuclear weapons and other specialty weapons. Experimental work is under way using banks of capacitors as power sources for electromagnetic armour and electromagnetic railguns or coilguns .

  8. Quantum capacitance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_capacitance

    In a traditional metal-insulator-metal capacitor, the galvani potential is the only relevant contribution. Therefore, the capacitance can be calculated in a straightforward way using Gauss's law. However, if one or both of the capacitor plates is a semiconductor, then galvani potential is not necessarily the only important contribution to ...

  9. Glossary of power electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_power_electronics

    An assembly of one or more capacitor elements in the same container with terminals brought out. capacitor bank An assembly of two or more capacitor units, electrically connected to each other. capacitor A general term used when it is not necessary to state whether reference is made to an element, a unit or a capacitor bank. capacitor equipment