Phasors

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Phasor Representation


\begin{align}
v(t)&=V_{max}\cos(\omega t+\phi)=\Re\left\{V_{max}e^{j(\omega t+\phi)}\right\}=\Re\left\{V_{max}e^{j\omega t}e^{j\phi)}\right\}=\Re\left\{\mathbb{V}e^{j\omega t}\right\}\\
\mathbb{V}&=\mathbb{V}_{max}=V_{max}e^{j\phi}\\
\end{align}

RMS Values


\begin{align}
V_{rms}&=\sqrt{\frac{1}{T}\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T}\left(x(\tau)\right)^2~d\tau}
\end{align}

And for a pure sinusoid,


\begin{align}
v(t)&=V_{max}\cos(\omega t+\phi)\\
V_{rms}&=\sqrt{\frac{1}{T}\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T}\left(\cos(\omega\tau+\phi)\right)^2~d\tau}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}V_{max}
\end{align}

meaning


\begin{align}
\mathbb{V}&=\mathbb{V}_{max}=V_{max}e^{j\phi}=(\sqrt{2})V_{rms}e^{j\phi}\\
\mathbb{V}_{rms}&=V_{rms}e^{j\phi}=\frac{V_{rms}}{\sqrt{2}}e^{j\phi}
\end{align}

Note - The Giorgio Rizzoni book uses


\begin{align}
\tilde{\mathbf{V}}
\end{align}

to express the RMS version of the phasor, so


\begin{align}
\tilde{\mathbf{V}}\Longleftrightarrow\mathbb{V}_{rms}
\end{align}

Using Phasor Notation for Voltage and Current to Calculate Average Power


\begin{align}
\mbox{Complex Power: }&\mathbb{S}=\mathbb{V}_{rms}\mathbb{I}_{rms}^*=\frac{\mathbb{V}_{max}\mathbb{I}_{max}}{2}\\
\end{align}

Note - the potentially complex number \mathbb{S} is not a phasor. It is not a representation of a magnitude and phase for a sinusoid. It is merely a mathematical tool for calculating the average real and reactive power for an AC circuit.

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