Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › InductanceInductance - Wikipedia

    The unit of inductance in the SI system is the henry (H), named after Joseph Henry, which is the amount of inductance that generates a voltage of one volt when the current is changing at a rate of one ampere per second.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Henry_(unit)Henry (unit) - Wikipedia

    The henry (symbol: H) is the unit of electrical inductance in the International System of Units (SI).

  3. Inductance is defined as the property of an electric conductor which causes an electromotive force that is generated due to a change in the current flow. There are two types of inductance: self-inductance and mutual inductance.

  4. Feb 2, 2023 · The SI unit of inductance is Henry or H, named after American scientist Joseph Henry. He discovered electromagnetic induction around 1831. Inductance and Shape of Inductors. Inductors are designed to take advantage of inductance by taking the shape of a coil.

  5. The unit of inductance is the henry, named after Joseph Henry (1797–1878), the American scientist who discovered electromagnetic induction independently of and at about the same time as Michael Faraday (1791–1867) did in England. Faraday published his findings first and so gets most of the credit.

  6. Jul 11, 2021 · The unit of self- and mutual inductance is the henry (H), where \(1 \, H = 1 \, \Omega \cdot s.\) The self-inductance \(L\) of an inductor is proportional to how much flux changes with current. For an N-turn inductor, \[L = N\dfrac{\Delta \Phi}{\Delta I}.\]

  7. henry, unit of either self-inductance or mutual inductance, abbreviated H, and named for the American physicist Joseph Henry. One henry is the value of self-inductance in a closed circuit or coil in which one volt is produced by a variation of the inducing current of one ampere per second.

  8. Inductance is the property of a device that expresses how effectively it induces an emf in another device. Mutual inductance is the effect of two devices inducing emfs in each other. A change in current \(\displaystyle dI_1/dt\) in one circuit induces an emf (\(\displaystyle ε_2\)) in the second:

  9. inductance, property of a conductor (often in the shape of a coil) that is measured by the size of the electromotive force, or voltage, induced in it, compared with the rate of change of the electric current that produces the voltage.

  10. phys.libretexts.org › Courses › University_of_California_Davis5.3: Inductance - Physics LibreTexts

    The units for inductance are: \(\left[M\right] = \left[\dfrac{B\cdot A}{I}\right] = \dfrac{T\cdot m^2}{A} \equiv H\;\;\; \text{("henry")}\) One thing that seems to distinguish mutual inductance from capacitance is the apparent one-way nature of it – there are distinct primary and secondary coils, while a capacitor just has two conductors ...