Farad

Category:OSWfa664d20605b5fd586192a9484cf3dbc /
Revision as of 05:47, 1 March 2025 by Admin (talk | contribs) ([bot] update of page content)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Farad
ID OSWfa664d20605b5fd586192a9484cf3dbc
UUID fa664d20-605b-5fd5-8619-2a9484cf3dbc
Label Farad
Machine compatible name Farad
Statements (outgoing)
Statements (incoming)

Description

The SI unit of electric capacitance. Very early in the study of electricity scientists discovered that a pair of conductors separated by an insulator can store a much larger charge than an isolated conductor can store. The better the insulator, the larger the charge that the conductors can hold. This property of a circuit is called capacitance, and it is measured in farads. One farad is defined as the ability to store one coulomb of charge per volt of potential difference between the two conductors. This is a natural definition, but the unit it defines is very large. In practical circuits, capacitance is often measured in microfarads, nanofarads, or sometimes even in picofarads (10⁻¹² farad, or trillionths of a farad). The unit is named for the British physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867), who was known for his work in electricity and electrochemistry.

-- QUDT

Category (Class)
OWL Class
Imported fromA prefixed IRI defining this entry as a imported term. In OSW the prefix must be a registered imported ontology.<br>Definition: OWL Class https://w3id.org/emmo#Farad
OntologiesOntologies that contain this term<br>Definition: OWL Class
EmmoClass
Supercategories<br>Definition: Category (Class), OWL Class, EmmoClass
  • CapacitanceUnit
  • metaclass<br>Definition: Category (Class), EmmoClass
  • EmmoClass
  • jsondata
    rdf_type
    "owl:Class"
    uuid"fa664d20-605b-5fd5-8619-2a9484cf3dbc"
    iri"https://w3id.org/emmo#Farad"
    name"Farad"
    label
    text"Farad"
    lang"en"
    description
    text"The SI unit of electric capacitance. Very early in the study of electricity scientists discovered that a pair of conductors separated by an insulator can store a much larger charge than an isolated conductor can store. The better the insulator, the larger the charge that the conductors can hold. This property of a circuit is called capacitance, and it is measured in farads. One farad is defined as the ability to store one coulomb of charge per volt of potential difference between the two conductors. This is a natural definition, but the unit it defines is very large. In practical circuits, capacitance is often measured in microfarads, nanofarads, or sometimes even in picofarads (10⁻¹² farad, or trillionths of a farad). The unit is named for the British physicist Michael Faraday (1791-1867), who was known for his work in electricity and electrochemistry. -- QUDT"
    lang"en"
    meta
    uuid"467e8560-5a45-48e8-9c7f-adacf22fa487"
    wiki_page
    title"OSWfa664d20605b5fd586192a9484cf3dbc"
    namespace"Category"
    change_id
    "4caad4a3-8d2d-4691-8196-627860411931"
    type
    "Category:OSW57beed5e1294434ba77bb6516e461456"
    subclass_of
    "Category:OSWb14d9be5f81e469babca379c2e83feab"
    metaclass
    "Category:OSW57beed5e1294434ba77bb6516e461456"
    ontologies
    "Item:OSWbf347f1ffbcf5991827013ccf9a1c68a"
    imported_from"emmo:Farad"

    This category currently contains no pages or media.