¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Impedances
1. impedance [n] - See also: impedance
Lexicographical Neighbors of Impedances
Literary usage of Impedances
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Experimental Electrical Engineering and Manual for Electrical Testing for by Vladimir Karapetoff (1922)
"Equivalent admittances and impedances. Any arbitrary network of impedances in
... Or else, the given network of impedances may be replaced by a single ..."
2. Theory and Calculation of Alternating Current Phenomena by Charles Proteus Steinmetz (1916)
"Since emfs. are combined by adding their complex expressions, we have: The joint
impedance of a number of series-connected impedances is the sum of the ..."
3. Electricity and Magnetism for Engineers by Harold Pender (1919)
"As shown in Article 181, two or more impedances zi, z2, etc., in series are
equivalent to a single impedance z = vw+x* where R = ri + r2 + etc. ..."
4. Fundamental Principles of Electric and Magnetic Circuits by Fred Alan Fish (1920)
"impedances in Series.—If two or more impedances are in series, the total emf is
equal to the vector sum of the emf's required for the separate impedances. ..."
5. Alternating-current Machines: Being the Second Volume of Dynamo Electric by Samuel Sheldon, Hobart Mason, Erich Hausmann (1911)
"impedances in Series and in Parallel. — If a circuit have some impedances in
series and some in parallel, or in any series parallel combination, ..."
6. Vectors and Vector Diagrams: Applied to the Alternating Current Circuit by William Cramp, Charles Frederick Smith (1909)
"If a circuit contains two impedances in series, the diagram showing the idle ...
Constant-voltage circuit—two impedances in series. to that of the second. ..."
7. Theoretical and Practical Electrical Engineering: Comprising a Course of by Louis Denton Bliss (1922)
"The same rule may be applied for impedances in parallel except that the ...
Therefore the combined impedance of any number of separate impedances in ..."
8. Electrical Papers by Oliver Heaviside (1894)
"ABOLITION OF REFLECTION BY EQUALITY OF impedances. ... (73d) Now let /^j'j and
L,vs be the impedances of the two circuits, L^ and L.2 being the inductances ..."