It is a special type of synchronous motor.It works on the principle of hysteresis and the torque is produced due to hysteresis
it is used for small power application ...
A comparator will trigger at a set point as deigned Without hysteresis if the level is there for a very long time it will have the effect of oscillating back and forth . hysteresis is feedback to insure a dead band whereby it has to be one state or the other
See the diagram linked below.
No, you're hysteresis losses are set by Bmax, frequency, and material. The function is highly nonlinear and the loss goes up disproportionately with Bmax. When designing power transformers, you typically want the hysteresis + eddy losses to equal the copper losses.
Give a brief idea of principle of hysteresis motor,application.
It is a special type of synchronous motor.It works on the principle of hysteresis and the torque is produced due to hysteresis
hysteresis
it is used for small power application ...
A hysteresis motor operates on the principle of hysteresis loss in the rotor. It has a rotor made of high coercivity material like chrome steel, which exhibits significant hysteresis characteristics. The rotating magnetic field in the stator induces eddy currents in the rotor, causing it to lag slightly behind the field, resulting in continuous rotation.
sa lahat ng bobo ikaw ang tanga
In hysteresis materials it represents the energy dissipated in them during the cycle of magnetization & demagnetization (just refer any hysteresis loop diagram) . This is used in many applications especially in aerospace to damp the oscillations in satellite.
A comparator will trigger at a set point as deigned Without hysteresis if the level is there for a very long time it will have the effect of oscillating back and forth . hysteresis is feedback to insure a dead band whereby it has to be one state or the other
diagram of motor od 1981 corvette
where can you find a diagram of 1994 pontiac grand am motor?
Just like a transformer, the core losses are a combination of eddy current losses and hysteresis losses.
what is hysteresis losses