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Revision as of 18:51, 20 April 2015 editMario Castelán Castro (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users1,898 edits Merge into “Phase (waves)”.← Previous edit Revision as of 22:47, 20 April 2015 edit undoSpinningspark (talk | contribs)89,216 edits Reverted good faith edits by Mario Castelán Castro (talk): Nobody in the talk page discussion supported merge. Get consensus for this first. (TW)Next edit →
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{{other uses}}
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{{merge to|Phase (waves)|date=October 2013}}
In the context of ], '''phase angle''' refers to the angular component of the ] representation of the function. The notation <math>A\ang \!\ \theta, </math>&nbsp; for a vector with magnitude (or ''amplitude'') ''A'' and phase angle θ, is called ]. This notation is frequently used to represent an ]. In this case the phase angle is the phase difference between the voltage applied to the impedance and the current driven through it.

In the context of periodic phenomena, such as a ], ''phase angle'' is synonymous with ].

==References==
* {{FS1037C}}

== External links ==
*

{{DEFAULTSORT:Phase Angle}}
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Revision as of 22:47, 20 April 2015

For other uses, see Phase angle (vectors, phasors, and periodic phenomena) (disambiguation).
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Phase (waves). (Discuss) Proposed since October 2013.

In the context of phasors, phase angle refers to the angular component of the complex number representation of the function. The notation A   θ , {\displaystyle A\angle \!\ \theta ,}   for a vector with magnitude (or amplitude) A and phase angle θ, is called angle notation. This notation is frequently used to represent an electrical impedance. In this case the phase angle is the phase difference between the voltage applied to the impedance and the current driven through it.

In the context of periodic phenomena, such as a wave, phase angle is synonymous with phase.

References

External links

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