FionaZuppa
Senior Member
- Location
- AZ
- Occupation
- Part Time Electrician (semi retired, old) - EE retired.
Well, after the choice of a unit vector, a one dimensional vector space is "the same thing" as the scalar field. Not sure it is worth distinguishing in this case.
Nope, you're mistaken. Once you choose a direction to represent positive power transfer (e.g. from the "generator" to the "load"), then negative power just means that energy is being transferred in the reverse direction, i.e. from the "load" to the "generator". Which occurs every other quarter cycle with a purely reactive load, so that the net energy transfer is 0.
Cheers, Wayne
a generator never transfers energy back to itself :thumbsup:, the transfer direction of power is to the load, always. I(t) may change direction, transfer of power does not.
net energy transfer can never be zero, if it were you would have zero work.