What Is the Average Potential Difference in an AC Circuit?

AI Thread Summary
The average potential difference in an AC circuit can be determined by integrating the voltage function over one full period and dividing by the period length. The voltage across the terminals is given by V=V_0cos(ωt), with an amplitude of V_0 = 46.0 V. The root-mean-square (rms) potential difference has been calculated as 32.5 V using the formula V_rms = V_0/√2. It is clarified that the average potential difference is not the same as the rms value, as the average does not involve squaring the voltage before integration. Understanding the integration process is essential for correctly calculating the average potential difference.
ttiger2k7
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[SOLVED] Average Potential Difference

Homework Statement


The voltage across the terminals of an ac power supply varies with time according to V=V_0\cos(\omega t). The voltage amplitude is V_0 = 46.0 V

From the prior question, I already figured out that the root-mean-square potential difference is 32.5. V

Question What is the average potential difference V_{{\rm a}{\rm v}} between the two terminals of the power supply?


Homework Equations



V_{rms}=V/\sqrt{2}
V_{rms}=Vcos(\omega*t+\varphi)


The Attempt at a Solution



At first I thought that the average and the rms was the same thing, but now I can't figure it out. Does it involve finding current?
 
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ttiger2k7 said:
At first I thought that the average and the rms was the same thing, but now I can't figure it out. Does it involve finding current?

The average is just like the rms, except you don't square before integrating and you do not take a square root afterwards. It does noet involve finding current
 
Hm, I don't understand. Where would you be integrating?
 
ttiger2k7 said:
Hm, I don't understand. Where would you be integrating?

when calculating the average. How did you calculate V_rms? You integrate over one full period of the AC and divide by the length of the period.
 
All I did to calculate V_rms was taking V divided by square root of 2, since for any sinusoidally varying quantity the rms value is always \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} the value. I didn't integrate at all.
 
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