That means that the voltage and the current are in phase.
10p
Does. a 90° angle have right angles
It is the alternate angle to the angle of elevation
The conduction angle in an SCR is the phase angle relative to the power line at which point the gate is fired to commit the anode to conduct to the cathode. By varying the conduction angle, you can change the average power transferred by the SCR.
Although we use the term 'Phase angle' it's also an angle referred to another phasor (voltage or current).For example,conventionally when expressing power factor, we use 'voltage' as the reference. So the 'phase angle' of a particular phasor is the phase difference between our reference (voltage) & the phasor.As the gist, both mean the same except that 'phase angle' is the direction of the phasor w.r.t. positive x direction (reference)..AnswerBy definition, phase angle is the angle by which a load current leads or lags a supply voltage.Phase difference is the angle between any two electical quantities -for example, the angle two phase voltages of a three-phase system.
The phase angle is the angle that has a tangent of (imaginary part)/(real part).
The current through a resonant circuit is (in general) out of phase with the voltage. One measure of the phase angle is this angle. At resonance the phase angel is near zero so it can be used as a parameter to drive a self-tuning mechanism.
Phase angle is defined as the angle by which the load current leads or lags the supply voltage in an AC circuit. There are numerous ways to calculate a circuit's phase angle, so there is no 'formula' as such. For example, if you know a load's resistance and impedance, or its true power and apparent power, then you can use basic trigonometry to calculate the phase angle, and so on.
The angle between the expected and actual secondary current is known as phase error.
in a series RC circuit phase angle is directly proportional to the capacitance
1 & 3
Q = 3 Vph Iph sin(phase angle) = 31/2 Vline Iline sin(phase angle)
The phase angle is defined as the angle by which the load current leads or lags the supply voltage.For a purely-resistive load, the phase angle is zero, because the load current is in phase with the supply voltage.For a purely-inductive load, the phase angle is 90 degrees lagging.But few loads are either purely-resistive or purely-inductive; typically, most loads are resistive-inductive. This means that, typically, the phase angle lies somewhere between zero and 90 degrees.
That means that the voltage and the current are in phase.
The phase angle in a wave equation can be found by comparing the equation to a standard form, such as (y = A \sin(\omega t + \phi)), where (\phi) is the phase angle. This angle represents the horizontal shift of the wave relative to a standard sine curve. You can determine the phase angle by comparing the equation to the standard form and identifying the value that corresponds to the horizontal shift in the wave.
Your question doesn't really make much sense. Phase angle is simply the angle by which the load current leads or lags the supply voltage.