A current source of 12 cos 2000t A, a \(200\ \Omega\) resistor, and a 0.2 H inductor are in parallel. Assume steady-state conditions exist. At t = 1 ms, find the power being absorbed by the (a) resistor; (b) inductor; (c) sinusoidal source.
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Textbook Solutions for Engineering Circuit Analysis
Question
For the circuit of Fig. 11.39, compute the average power delivered to each load, the apparent power supplied by the source, and the power factor of the combined loads if (a) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=14 \angle 32^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=22\ \Omega\); (b) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=2 \angle 0^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=6-j\ \Omega\); (c) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=100 \angle 70^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=75 \angle 90^{\circ}\ \Omega\).
Solution
The first step in solving 11 problem number 29 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: For the circuit of Fig. 11.39, compute the average power delivered to each load, the apparent power supplied by the source, and the power factor of the combined loads if (a) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=14 \angle 32^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=22\ \Omega\); (b) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=2 \angle 0^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=6-j\ \Omega\); (c) \(\mathbf{Z}_1=100 \angle 70^{\circ}\ \Omega\) and \(\mathbf{Z}_2=75 \angle 90^{\circ}\ \Omega\).
From the textbook chapter AC Circuit Power Analysis you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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