New Publications are available for Circuit theory and circuits
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New Publications are available now online for this publication.
Please follow the links to view the publication.Basic electrical units and circuits
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbns033e_ch1
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">This chapter discusses: simple electron theory; electrical charge and unit of current; effects of electrical current; electric conductors and insulators; electrical energy, work, and power; electromotive force and potential difference; resistance: Ohm's law; electrical circuits; ammeters and voltmeters; series circuits; parallel circuits; series-parallel circuits. A summary of formulas is also given for this chapter together with exercises.</p>Basic concepts of electric circuits
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbcs023e_ch1
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">This chapter is divided into 6 parts. The first part deals with the Introduction. The second part covers electric circuits and schematic diagrams. The third part talks about electric current. The fourth part talks about electric voltage. The fifth part deals with resistance and Ohm's law. The sixth part discusses reference direction of voltage and current.</p>Basic laws of electric circuits
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbcs023e_ch2
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">This chapter is divided into 5 parts. The first part deals with power and energy. The second part covers Kirchhoff's voltage law (KVL). The third part talks about Kirchhoff's current law (KCL). The fourth part discusses voltage source and current source. The fifth part talks about international units for circuit quantities.</p>Country life: Newton Abbot 1897-1908
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbht036e_ch10
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">It was the boldest experiment of his life. Helped only by a housekeeper, whom he brought from Paignton, he undertook the complete organisation of his domestic life. Oliver was ill-equipped for such a venture. The hundreds of little interactions with other people that make up day-to-day life were to him a trial and a burden. It wasn't simply laziness or selfishness, although that was the way it must have looked. His system for navigating life's hazards seemed to work differently from everybody else's: his antennae picked up different signals and his brain interpreted them in a way that made little allowance for human frailty other than his own.</p>Power in alternating-current circuits
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbns034e_ch5
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">This chapter discusses power in alternating-current circuits.</p>Further electronics
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbns034e_ch6
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">The subject of electronics is a vast and specialist field, and we cannot hope here to do more than cover the basics. It is assumed that the reader is conversant with Chapter 15 of Volume 1. Attention is also drawn to the work in Chapter 11 of this volume covering principles and applications of the oscilloscope and other measuring instruments. It should be appreciated that most electronic equipment looks very complex at first sight, as do the diagrams of their circuits. However, all equipment and circuits are made up of a number of interconnected components. When the operation of these parts is understood, then the functioning of the complete apparatus or circuit becomes clear.</p>Alternating-current theory
http://dl-live.theiet.org/content/books/10.1049/pbns034e_ch4
<p xmlns="http://pub2web.metastore.ingenta.com/ns/">This chapter discusses alternating current theory.</p>