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  2. Bifilar coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bifilar_coil

    A bifilar coil is an electromagnetic coil that contains two closely spaced, parallel windings. In electrical engineering, the word bifilar describes wire which is made of two filaments or strands. It is commonly used to denote special types of winding wire for transformers. Wire can be purchased in bifilar form, usually as different colored ...

  3. Ayrton–Perry winding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayrton–Perry_winding

    An Ayrton–Perry winding (named for William Edward Ayrton and John Perry) is a type of bifilar winding pattern used in winding wire on forms to make RF resistors. Its advantage is that the resulting coil of wire has low values of parasitic inductance and parasitic capacitance. [1] Ayrton–Perry windings of resistance wire are used to make ...

  4. Coil winding technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coil_winding_technology

    Coil winding technology. In electrical engineering, coil winding is the manufacture of electromagnetic coils. Coils are used as components of circuits, and to provide the magnetic field of motors, transformers, and generators, and in the manufacture of loudspeakers and microphones. The shape and dimensions of a winding are designed to fulfill ...

  5. Group delay and phase delay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_delay_and_phase_delay

    The group delay and phase delay properties of a linear time-invariant (LTI) system are functions of frequency, giving the time from when a frequency component of a time varying physical quantity—for example a voltage signal—appears at the LTI system input, to the time when a copy of that same frequency component—perhaps of a different physical phenomenon—appears at the LTI system output.

  6. Electromagnetic coil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_coil

    Electromagnetic coil. The magnetic field lines (green) of a current-carrying loop of wire pass through the center of the loop, concentrating the field there. An electromagnetic coil is an electrical conductor such as a wire in the shape of a coil (spiral or helix). [1][2] Electromagnetic coils are used in electrical engineering, in applications ...

  7. Common-mode rejection ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common-mode_rejection_ratio

    Common-mode rejection ratio. In electronics, the common mode rejection ratio (CMRR) of a differential amplifier (or other device) is a metric used to quantify the ability of the device to reject common-mode signals, i.e. those that appear simultaneously and in-phase on both inputs. An ideal differential amplifier would have infinite CMRR ...

  8. Transformer types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformer_types

    Transformer types. Transformer with two windings and iron core. Transformer with three windings. The dots show the relative configuration of the windings. Transformer with electrostatic screen preventing capacitive coupling between the windings. In an electric arc furnace, the transformer has a heavy copper bus for the low voltage winding ...

  9. Greiner–Hormann clipping algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greiner–Hormann_clipping...

    The Greiner-Hormann algorithm is used in computer graphics for polygon clipping. [ 1 ] It performs better than the Vatti clipping algorithm, but cannot handle degeneracies. [ 2 ] It can process both self-intersecting and non-convex polygons. It can be trivially generalized to compute other Boolean operations on polygons, such as union and ...