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[Phys-L] RLC lab



I’m doing an RLC lab tomorrow. I’m using a coil with an inductance of about 0.9 H and a resistance of about 60 ohms (both measured using a handheld meter). I connect it in series to a capacitor of 1 microfarad and an additional resistor of 100 ohms. So resonance is around 180 Hz. I use a Pasco function generator with an amplitude of about 5 V.

Measuring the voltage across the coil does give a peak around there. At low frequencies, the voltage goes to zero, but on the high-frequency end the voltage does not go to zero but instead levels off at quite a high value (maybe 1 V or more).

What’s the primary reason the voltage stays so high across the coil at high frequencies? (And when I say high, I mean above a few hundred hertz, not super high.)

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Carl E. Mungan, Professor of Physics 410-293-6680 (O) -3729 (F)
Naval Academy Stop 9c, 572C Holloway Rd, Annapolis MD 21402-1363
mailto:mungan@usna.edu http://usna.edu/Users/physics/mungan/