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Electrical Radiation Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

5 hits

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2 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

4 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

electric radiation, electrical radiation, radiant energy

SourceHitsSections
Theory and Calculation of Transient Electric Phenomena and Oscillations32
Radiation, Light and Illumination22
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 9: High-Frequency ConductorsTheory and Calculation of Transient Electric Phenomena and Oscillations2Workbenchlines 27003-27760
Lecture 1: Nature And Different Forms Of RadiationRadiation, Light and Illumination1Workbenchlines 608-1548
Lecture 2: Relation Of Bodies To RadiationRadiation, Light and Illumination1Workbenchlines 1549-2365
Chapter 5: Distributed Series CapacityTheory and Calculation of Transient Electric Phenomena and Oscillations1Workbenchlines 23586-23947
Chapter 9: High-Frequency Conductors - 2 hit(s)

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... ues of resistance and induc- tance. In conductors such as are used in the connections and the discharge path of lightning arresters and surge protectors, the unequal current distribution in the conductor (Chapter VII) and the power and voltage consumed by electric radiation, due to the finite velocity of the electric field (Chapter VIII), require con- sideration. The true ohmic resistance in high frequency conductors is usually entirely negligible compared with the effective resistance resulting from the unequal current di ...
Lecture 1: Nature And Different Forms Of Radiation - 1 hit(s)

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... s is the time required by the light 18,800 to travel 10 miles, this gives the velocity of light as 10 •* > lo,oOU or 188,000 miles per sec. The velocity of light in air, or rather in empty space, thus is 188,000 miles or 3 X 1010 cm. per sec. For electrical radiation, the velocity has been measured by Herz, and found to be the same as the velocity of light, and there is very good evidence that all radiations travel with the same velocity through space (except perhaps the rays of radioactive substances). 3. Regarding ...
Lecture 2: Relation Of Bodies To Radiation - 1 hit(s)

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... , in the theory of transient electric phenomena and oscillations.* The radiation may be of a single frequency, that is, a single wave; or a mixture of different frequencies, that is, a mixture of different and frequently of an infinite number of waves. Electric radiation usually is of a single frequency, that is, of the frequency or wave length determined by the constants of the electric circuit which produces the radiation, mainly the induct- ance L and the capacity C. They may, however, have different wave shapes, that ...
Chapter 5: Distributed Series Capacity - 1 hit(s)

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... 90, represented electrically as a circuit in Fig. 91, let r = the effective resistance per unit length of circuit, or per circuit element, that is, per arrester cylinder; g = the shunt conductance per unit length, representing leakage, brush dis- charge, electrical radiation, etc.; L = the inductance per unit length of circuit; C = the series capacity per unit length of cir- cuit, or circuit element, that is, capacity between adjacent arrester cylinders, and <70 = the shunt capacity per unit length of circuit, or circuit elem ...