Chemistry, asked by pujalachowdaiah1980, 8 months ago

what are reactance ?​

Answers

Answered by St08
1

Answer:

In electric and electronic systems, reactance is the opposition of a circuit element to the flow of current due to that element's inductance or capacitance. Greater reactance leads to smaller currents for the same voltage applied. Reactance is similar to electric resistance, but it differs in several respects.

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Answered by hritiksingh1
6

Answer:

Resistance can also be energy transferred such as electrical energy which is converted to mechanical energy.

Reactance is energy stored in either electric field (capacitance) or magnetic field (inductance). In AC circuits the energy in a reactive component is alternately stored and released on each cycle of the waveform. This storing of energy "looks" like a resistance temporarily. Imagine water flowing and filling a cup partially and then pouring the water back out each cycle. This would be an analogy to capacitive reactance. Since no energy is lost (it is just stored and released) it creates some temporary changes to the momentarily available energy (this shows up in phase lead/lag).

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