Difference between revisions of "Phasors Review"

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(Created page with "== Introduction == This is a '''very''' sparse review of the motivation for and the use of phasors. It is not necessarily ready for prime time, and it may potentially have er...")
 
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== Background ==
 
== Background ==
For circuits consisting of independent sources, dependent sources, reactive elements, and resistive elements, as long as certain conditions are met, if the independent sources consist of signals made up of one or more single-frequency sinusoids, the steady-state currents through and voltages across each element will also consist of signals made up of the same frequencies.  "Steady-state" here refers to the time when whatever the "initial conditions" of the system are no longer relevant and the system is responding purely to the independent sources.  "Certain conditions" include having resistive elements such that any perturbations from steady-state dissipate over time, avoiding doing anything "illegal" like trying to have an instantaneous change in voltage across a capacitor or instantaneous change in current through an inductor, and avoiding doing anything "weird" like having a voltage source in parallel with an inductor or a current source in series with a capacitor.  Assuming those certain conditions are met and the circuit has been in place long enough to reach the AC steady state, you can examine the circuit one frequency at a time (because, linearity).  And for that one frequency at a time, you can assume that every voltage and every current can be written as
+
For circuits consisting of independent sources, dependent sources, reactive elements, and resistive elements, as long as certain conditions are met, if the independent sources consist of signals made up of one or more single-frequency sinusoids, the steady-state currents through and voltages across each element will also consist of signals made up of the same frequencies.  "Steady-state" here refers to the time when whatever the "initial conditions" of the system are no longer relevant and the system is responding purely to the independent sources.  "Certain conditions" include having resistive elements such that any perturbations from steady-state dissipate over time, avoiding doing anything "illegal" like trying to have an instantaneous change in voltage across a capacitor or instantaneous change in current through an inductor, and avoiding doing anything "weird" like having a voltage source in parallel with an inductor or a current source in series with a capacitor.  Assuming those certain conditions are met and the circuit has been in place long enough to reach the AC steady state (ACSS), you can examine the circuit one frequency at a time (because, linearity).  And for that one frequency at a time, you can assume that every voltage and every current can be written as
 
<center><math>x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega t+\phi_x)</math></center>
 
<center><math>x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega t+\phi_x)</math></center>
 
where $$X$$ is the amplitude of the signal and $$\phi_x$$ is the phase of the signal.  For a linear, time-invariant circuit with all the input signals at the same frequency $$\omega$$, all AC steady-state signals will also be at that frequency $$\omega$$.  If one source has more than one frequency, if if there are several sources with a variety of different frequencies, as long as the system is LTI, you can solve at each frequency individually and then add the results together to get the outputs collectively.
 
where $$X$$ is the amplitude of the signal and $$\phi_x$$ is the phase of the signal.  For a linear, time-invariant circuit with all the input signals at the same frequency $$\omega$$, all AC steady-state signals will also be at that frequency $$\omega$$.  If one source has more than one frequency, if if there are several sources with a variety of different frequencies, as long as the system is LTI, you can solve at each frequency individually and then add the results together to get the outputs collectively.
 +
 +
== Euler Notation ==
 +
While $$x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega t+\phi_x)$$ is lovely, taking derivatives of it is not.  The $$n^{th}$$ derivative will definitely have an $$\omega^n$$ in front, but then there is the question of whether the result is a cos or sin and whether the result needs a + or - in front of it.  One way around that is to use complex exponentials to do the math, then just take the real part at the end to get the signal.  Specifically, recall that:
 +
<center><math>
 +
Ae^{j(\omega t+\phi)}=A\,\cos(\omega t+\phi)+j\,A\,\sin(\omega t+\phi)
 +
</math></center>
 +
such that
 +
<center><math>
 +
x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega_xt+\phi_x)=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{j(\omega_x t+\phi_x)}\right\}=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{j\omega_x t}e^{\phi_x}\right\}=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{\phi_x}e^{j\omega_x t}\right\}</math></center>
 +
Given that all the signals in the system at ACSS will be oscillating at the same frequency, all the signals will have the $$e^{j\omega_x t}$$ part and thus the only unique portions will be the amplitude $$X$$ and the phase $$\phi_x$$.  Thus, we only need to keep track of those items, and thus, the phasor is born!  The phasor $$\mathbb{X}$$ is a complex number specifically storing the amplitude $$X$$ and the phase $$\phi_x$$ for a single frequency sinusoid.  There are several ways to represent these two pieces of information; the two most common are:
 +
<center><math>
 +
\mathbb{X}=Xe^{j\phi_x}=X\angle \phi_x
 +
</math></center>
 +
For a phasor, you need to know the frequency of the system and then you can translate the magnitude and phase of the phasor to the amplitude and phase of a single-frequency sinusoid at that frequency.

Revision as of 03:34, 24 January 2024

Introduction

This is a very sparse review of the motivation for and the use of phasors. It is not necessarily ready for prime time, and it may potentially have errors, typographical and otherwise. Also, there will be logical fallacies that, over time, will be corrected. But it is a start, and hopefully a worthwhile one!

Background

For circuits consisting of independent sources, dependent sources, reactive elements, and resistive elements, as long as certain conditions are met, if the independent sources consist of signals made up of one or more single-frequency sinusoids, the steady-state currents through and voltages across each element will also consist of signals made up of the same frequencies. "Steady-state" here refers to the time when whatever the "initial conditions" of the system are no longer relevant and the system is responding purely to the independent sources. "Certain conditions" include having resistive elements such that any perturbations from steady-state dissipate over time, avoiding doing anything "illegal" like trying to have an instantaneous change in voltage across a capacitor or instantaneous change in current through an inductor, and avoiding doing anything "weird" like having a voltage source in parallel with an inductor or a current source in series with a capacitor. Assuming those certain conditions are met and the circuit has been in place long enough to reach the AC steady state (ACSS), you can examine the circuit one frequency at a time (because, linearity). And for that one frequency at a time, you can assume that every voltage and every current can be written as

\(x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega t+\phi_x)\)

where $$X$$ is the amplitude of the signal and $$\phi_x$$ is the phase of the signal. For a linear, time-invariant circuit with all the input signals at the same frequency $$\omega$$, all AC steady-state signals will also be at that frequency $$\omega$$. If one source has more than one frequency, if if there are several sources with a variety of different frequencies, as long as the system is LTI, you can solve at each frequency individually and then add the results together to get the outputs collectively.

Euler Notation

While $$x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega t+\phi_x)$$ is lovely, taking derivatives of it is not. The $$n^{th}$$ derivative will definitely have an $$\omega^n$$ in front, but then there is the question of whether the result is a cos or sin and whether the result needs a + or - in front of it. One way around that is to use complex exponentials to do the math, then just take the real part at the end to get the signal. Specifically, recall that:

\( Ae^{j(\omega t+\phi)}=A\,\cos(\omega t+\phi)+j\,A\,\sin(\omega t+\phi) \)

such that

\( x(t)=X\,\cos(\omega_xt+\phi_x)=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{j(\omega_x t+\phi_x)}\right\}=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{j\omega_x t}e^{\phi_x}\right\}=\mathfrak{R}\left\{Xe^{\phi_x}e^{j\omega_x t}\right\}\)

Given that all the signals in the system at ACSS will be oscillating at the same frequency, all the signals will have the $$e^{j\omega_x t}$$ part and thus the only unique portions will be the amplitude $$X$$ and the phase $$\phi_x$$. Thus, we only need to keep track of those items, and thus, the phasor is born! The phasor $$\mathbb{X}$$ is a complex number specifically storing the amplitude $$X$$ and the phase $$\phi_x$$ for a single frequency sinusoid. There are several ways to represent these two pieces of information; the two most common are:

\( \mathbb{X}=Xe^{j\phi_x}=X\angle \phi_x \)

For a phasor, you need to know the frequency of the system and then you can translate the magnitude and phase of the phasor to the amplitude and phase of a single-frequency sinusoid at that frequency.