What is the name for a pulse of current?

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A steady state electrical current is defined as DC, while a periodic current that alternates is referred to as AC. A single-polarity pulse of rising current, such as a rectified sine wave, is classified as a DC pulse, though it requires additional details like rise time and duration for clarity. The term DC can be misleading if used to describe unidirectional currents that vary in amplitude, as this can lead to confusion with AC terminology. To avoid ambiguity, it's recommended to clearly differentiate between pure DC and varying currents, which may exhibit characteristics of both AC and DC. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for accurate communication in electrical discussions.
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A steady state electrical current is called DC. A periodic rising and falling current is called AC. What is a single-polarity pulse of rising current ( a single rectified hump of a sine wave e.g.) called? AC? DC? or something else?
 
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hogshead said:
A steady state electrical current is called DC. A periodic rising and falling current is called AC. What is a single-polarity pulse of rising current ( a single rectified hump of a sine wave e.g.) called? AC? DC? or something else?

DC is a unidirectional current (or voltage) but not necessarily a constant one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DC_current

An AC current or voltage is not a rising and falling one. It is one which changes polarity from positive to negative to positive and so on.

A pulse which does not change polarity but changes amplitude is just a DC pulse. However this needs to be supplemented with information about rise time, duration, fall time, repetition rate etc.
 
Current spike.

Claude
 
A step function is often called a Heaviside Function.

DC means, strictly, an unchanging value of current. Unidirectional current may be referred to as DC but it is sloppy terminology and leads to confusion. If you want to avoid confusion then don't refer to anything other than DC as DC. (despite what may be written in wiki or elsewhere) A current that is always positive but has a varying value is a combination of DC and AC ('ripple'). If you state it that way then there can be no confusion.
 
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