inductance - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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inductance (countable and uncountable, plural inductances)
- (physics) The property of an electric circuit by which a voltage is induced in it by a changing magnetic field.
The power cable itself has enough inductance to disrupt the digital signal of the video output cable, due to poor shielding.
- The quantity of the resulting electromagnetic flux divided by the current that produces it, measured in henries (SI symbol: H.)
What is the inductance of that power supply's main inductor?
property
- Armenian: մակածություն (hy) (makacutʻyun)
- Chinese:
- Dutch: inductie (nl)
- Finnish: induktanssi (fi)
- German: Induktivität (de) f
- Greek: αυτεπαγωγή (el) f (aftepagogí)
- Italian: induttanza (it) f
- Latvian: induktivitāte f
- Maori: whāpoapoa
- Portuguese: indutância f
- Romanian: inductanță (ro) f
- Tagalog: dawit (tl)
- Turkish: indüktans
quantity
- Dutch: inductie (nl)
- Finnish: induktanssi (fi)
- Greek: αυτεπαγωγή (el) f (aftepagogí)
- Italian: induttanza (it) f
- Latvian: induktivitāte f
- Turkish: indüktans
inductance f (plural inductances)
- → Persian: اَندوکتانس (anduktâns)
- → Turkish: indüktans
- “inductance”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.