tete9000
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hey guys, i was just wondering, in a series RLC circuit, is "R" the Thevinin's equivalent resistance at the "Capacitor and Inductor" terminals?, if not please correct me. Thanks.
tete9000 said:hey guys, i was just wondering, in a series RLC circuit, is "R" the Thevinin's equivalent resistance at the "Capacitor and Inductor" terminals?, if not please correct me. Thanks.
tete9000 said:Hi berkeman, sorry if my question isn't well-clarified, what i meant is "When solving for V(t) or I(t) of an RLC circuit (series or parallel), the resistance in the circuit is taken to be the Thevenin's equivalent resistance at the terminals of both "the Capacitor and Inductor"?I'm not sure if this is right...so I'm asking you guys?is this right?if not please correct me.
berkeman said:Sorry that I'm not understanding the question. An ideal capacitor has infinite resistance, and an ideal inductor has zero resistance. Are you asking about the full complex impedance of the series combination of the R, L and C?
tete9000 said:exactly...i meant the series combination of a Resistor, Capacitor, and Inductor.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4e/RLC_series_circuit.png
tete9000 said:Hi berkeman, sorry if my question isn't well-clarified, what i meant is "When solving for V(t) or I(t) of an RLC circuit (series or parallel), the resistance in the circuit is taken to be the Thevenin's equivalent resistance at the terminals of both "the Capacitor and Inductor"?