LarryFine
Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
- Location
- Henrico County, VA
- Occupation
- Electrical Contractor
I think we shared admirably; we each took half of the answers.
Now that you mention it, I think I got the left half.steve66 said:Yes, but who took the right half?
But is (are?) half actually correct? There are 255 possible answer combinations and only one that is absolutely correct.LarryFine said:Now that you mention it, I think I got the left half.
I was referring only to the possible combinations of choices for the answer. An answer can have one or more choices of the available eight, but if one choice is incorrect, or the answer does not contain all available correct choices, it is not the absolute correct answer. Showing you all 255 combinations is more typing...and brain cell usage ...than I care to do, as I know of no easy way to list them all. It is much easier to just calculate the number possible. However, I will at least elaborate enough so you are aware of how there are 255 combinations...steve66 said:Can you show us the 255 combinations so Larry & I can try again?
But really, I don't see 255 combinations. I see two ways to define the voltage, and two ways to define the current. And you can have right answers or wrong answers. Plus there might be a couple of ways to write the same equation. So I am seeing only 8 or maybe 16 combinations.
...
Reformatting the equation does not account for the battery side. Remember all circuits are a closed path (or loop), electrically. For a "simple" circuit, the current flowing into a point is equal to the current leaving the point. The current vector for one path between two points in a loop must be opposite that of the other path (or the same vector with a negative value). Otherwise, the loop cannot exist. Because a double subscript notation also serves as a direction-of-current indicator, the equation must also indicate the direction. Moving IAB from one side of the equation to the other does not do that.steve66 said:...
I considered only the resistor. We don't need to consider the battery side. Kirchoffs voltage and currents laws tell us if it works for the resistor, it works for the source. In other words, looking at the battery only turns the equation around. Instead of VAB=IAB*R, you have VAB/IAB=R. Same equation, just moved IAB to the other side.
The "Given" stipulates, "Vab would be the voltage at node a with respect to voltage at node b, and that Vab is positive."steve66 said:...
So if you say VAB is the voltage at B with respect to A, I think Larry got the right answers. If you say VAB is the voltage at A with respect to B, I think I got the right answers.
Steve
Yeh, that works for total combinations, but in my write up I felt I had to be more explicit... not knowing how much you are aware of in the math of probability (not that I'm all that versed, mind you). Now how do you do the math for the possible combinations if I tell you I only see 2 of the choices as being correct? That is, there are 28 possible combinations of picking 2 of the 8 choices. Anyway, it's not my intention to focus on probability math. Can we get back to the discussion of double subscript notation?steve66 said:...
...But you are making the math harder than it has to be, and you went to a lot of extra work. For any of the 8 answers, we can either pick it, or not pick it. So the number of combinations is really just:
2^8=256
This includes the posibility that none of the answers is right (i.e. we pick 0 answers). So if we assume at least one answer must be right, we get:
256-1=255
Which is the result you got.
Who are you calling touchy?@!Smart $ said:Just thought I'd add that last part because there seems to be some awfully touchy partcipants on this forum.
"Yes, me; and don't call me Shirley!"Smart $ said:"Surely" not you
steve66 said:kingpb is the one complaining we didn't leave him any answers. He must be the touchy one
Actually you did leave him answers. That's why I brought up possible combinations. The way I see it, you chose 4 of the 8 available choices with at least one of the 4 being incorrect. The result is an incorrect answer (Think "one bad apple..."). You would have been better off by chosing only one having a correctly notated formula. However, assuming more than one of the available choices is correctly notated, choosing only one correctly notated formula would still not be the one absolutely correct answer.steve66 said:kingpb is the one complaining we didn't leave him any answers. He must be the touchy one
That's exactly how I use to do it before I learned of the combination function, such as the one in Excel or on my calculator, where you don't have to reason it out. The reasoning gets a little more difficult as the numbers increase (at least it does for me, more so as the years go by, while not utilizing math of the sort in daily functions).steve66 said:I get 28 correct combinations of answers also. 8 choices for the first answer, and 7 choices for the 2nd answer. That gives 8*7 = 56 possible ways to list the answers. But that counts answer "1 and 5" and "5 and 1" as 2 different items. So there are 56 premutations, and only half that many combinations.
I wrote, "...if I tell you I only see 2 of the choices as being correct?" Does that mean I said there are only 2 correctly notated equations? Regardless, please reread the stipulations... carefully! Hint: There are no -VAB's or -VBA's in the equations. If you don't see it after providing this hint, I'll have not other choice than to provide a dead-giveaway hint...steve66 said:I still don't see how you think only two equations are correct. If #1 is correct, then I can prove #4 is the same equation since IBA = -IAB. In the same way, I can prove #6 is the same equation with VBA = -VAB and IBA = -IAB. Same for #7.
rattus said:I think we now agree that Vab means the voltage drop from point a to point b.
steve66 said:I'm not sure we agree on Vab yet. Everything that has been said about it so far could apply only to DC. Now you are throwing in AC. I think we need to expand the Vab definition, and add a definition for 120@-30. We also need to define t=0, and define exactly what our scope will "trigger" on.
Is this coming around to the single phase - two phase debate again?
Steve