How do I find voltage at time t given a voltage phasor?

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To find the time-domain voltage from the given voltage phasor V = 12∠70° at 60 Hz, the relevant equation is V(t) = Vmax*sin(ωt + φ). The calculations initially yield a result that does not match any provided answer choices, leading to confusion. A suggestion to use the cosine function instead reveals a potential answer of -0.355 V, indicating that cosine may be a more appropriate basis function in this context. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the choice between sine and cosine in phasor analysis, as well as the conversion between the two functions. Ultimately, the correct approach can lead to a valid time-domain voltage calculation.
BryanDorais
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This is a problem from my midterm that I'm trying to understand before my final. The question is;

A voltage phasor is given by V = 12∠70° and the frequency is 60 Hz. What is the time-domain voltage at t = 1 ms?
a. 1.47 V
b. 5.11 V
c. -0.335 V
d. -4.73 V

As far as i know, the only equation relevant to this is V(t) = Vmax*sin(ωt + φ). When i plug in the values, V(t = 0.001) = 12 sin(120π(0.001) + 7π/18), i get V = 12(0.9996), which does not match any of the possible results.

What am i getting wrong?
 
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Your math looks fine to me.
 
Agreed. As a sanity check, (1ms/16.7ms) * 360 degrees is 21.6 degrees, added to 70 degrees is very close to 90 degrees, so the sin() is very close to 1. So it seems like there should be an answer close to the max amplitude of 12 in the choices...
 
berkeman said:
Agreed. As a sanity check, (1ms/16.7ms) * 360 degrees is 21.6 degrees, added to 70 degrees is very close to 90 degrees, so the sin() is very close to 1. So it seems like there should be an answer close to the max amplitude of 12 in the choices...

Among the choices was "None of the above." I did not include that option since it was what i chose during the exam and it was marked as incorrect
 
BryanDorais said:
V(t) = Vmax*sin(ωt + φ).
What do you get if you use cos() instead...?
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phasor
Definition
Euler's formula indicates that sinusoids can be represented mathematically as the sum of two complex-valued functions:

A ⋅ cos ⁡ ( ω t + θ ) = A ⋅ e i ( ω t + θ ) + e − i ( ω t + θ ) 2 , {\displaystyle A\cdot \cos(\omega t+\theta )=A\cdot {\frac {e^{i(\omega t+\theta )}+e^{-i(\omega t+\theta )}}{2}},}
c12165cb7062b9f952a6f6e57c2d5b824db9d54d
[a]
or as the real part of one of the functions:

A ⋅ cos ⁡ ( ω t + θ ) = Re ⁡ { A ⋅ e i ( ω t + θ ) } = Re ⁡ { A e i θ ⋅ e i ω t } . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}A\cdot \cos(\omega t+\theta )=\operatorname {Re} \{A\cdot e^{i(\omega t+\theta )}\}=\operatorname {Re} \{Ae^{i\theta }\cdot e^{i\omega t}\}.\end{aligned}}}
d8e3aabb83794180c031d1aa471da387ce14dd91

The function A ⋅ e i ( ω t + θ ) {\displaystyle A\cdot e^{i(\omega t+\theta )}}
274e97acfe05c8eb04b023822597bf0a1ca2ea2d
is the analytic representation of A ⋅ cos ⁡ ( ω t + θ ) . {\displaystyle A\cdot \cos(\omega t+\theta ).}
54cc1250d751b6580bd30c5e7a93d321845a5754
Figure 2 depicts it as a rotating vector in a complex plane. It is sometimes convenient to refer to the entire function as a phasor,[11] as we do in the next section. But the term phasor usually implies just the static vector , A e i θ . {\displaystyle ,Ae^{i\theta }.}
397c226ee41cb9417ce7031216b53f58561dd128
An even more compact representation of a phasor is the angle notation: A ∠ θ . {\displaystyle A\angle \theta .\,}
f9f1ad9b51782011fe9a2367c9fef311c4c9b29e
See also vector notation.
 
berkeman said:
What do you get if you use cos() instead...?

If i use Cosine the answer is -0.355(C). How did you know to use Cos? The only formula i have uses Sin only
 
A couple of points to ponder:

Phasors are usually assumed to be rms values. Time domain versions are generally peak values.

You have a choice of basis functions for the time domain, either cosine or sine. Cosine may be more common :wink:
 
BryanDorais said:
If i use Cosine the answer is -0.355(C). How did you know to use Cos? The only formula i have uses Sin only
It's been so long since I used them, I don't remember if there is a reason that you would choose one over the other. There is the wikipedia definition above, and it kind of makes sense to use the cos() form because you'd like the value to be on the Re axis for an argument of zero, I would think.
 
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Thank you very much for the assistance.
 
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BryanDorais said:
If i use Cosine the answer is -0.355(C). How did you know to use Cos? The only formula i have uses Sin only

Note that you can convert between sin and cos if you're given one and need the other (my instructor likes to give us things in terms of sines, forcing us to convert to cosine):
##sin(ωt+θ)=cos(ωt+θ-\frac{π}{2})##
##cos(ωt+θ)=sin(ωt+θ+\frac{π}{2})##
(θ may be zero or negative)
 
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