This document discusses sinusoids and phasors. It defines a sinusoid as a signal that has the form of a sine or cosine function. It then defines a phasor as a complex number that represents the amplitude and phase of a sinusoid. The document provides examples and exercises demonstrating sinusoids, phasors, and how sinusoids can be represented by phasors. It also covers voltage-current relationships, impedance, admittance and their applications in examples and exercises.
This document discusses sinusoids and phasors. It defines a sinusoid as a signal that has the form of a sine or cosine function. It then defines a phasor as a complex number that represents the amplitude and phase of a sinusoid. The document provides examples and exercises demonstrating sinusoids, phasors, and how sinusoids can be represented by phasors. It also covers voltage-current relationships, impedance, admittance and their applications in examples and exercises.
This document discusses sinusoids and phasors. It defines a sinusoid as a signal that has the form of a sine or cosine function. It then defines a phasor as a complex number that represents the amplitude and phase of a sinusoid. The document provides examples and exercises demonstrating sinusoids, phasors, and how sinusoids can be represented by phasors. It also covers voltage-current relationships, impedance, admittance and their applications in examples and exercises.
Md Sanzid Bin Hossain Sinusoids • A sinusoid is a signal that has the form of the sine or cosine function Sinusoids(Cont) Example 1 Exercise 1 Example 2 Exercise 2 Phasors • A phasor is a complex number that represents the amplitude and phase of a sinusoid. Properties of Phasors Sinusoid-phasor transformation. Example 3 Example 3 Example 4 Example 5 Example 6 Summary of voltage-current relationships. Impedance and Admittance Example 7 Example 7 Exercise 3 Example 8 Example 8(Continue) Exercise 4 Example 9 Example 9 (cont.)