Question 1 of 10
What is the formula to calculate peak voltage (Vp) from RMS voltage (Vrms)?
Peak voltage is related to RMS voltage by a factor of the square root of 2, approximately 1.414.
Question 2 of 10
What is the formula to calculate peak-to-peak voltage (Vp-p) from peak voltage (Vp)?
The peak-to-peak voltage is the difference between the maximum and minimum values of the voltage, which is twice the peak voltage.
Question 3 of 10
What is the formula to calculate peak voltage (Vp) from average voltage (Vav)?
The peak voltage can be calculated from the average voltage using a factor of pi/2, or approximately 1.571.
Question 4 of 10
How can you calculate peak-to-peak voltage (Vp-p) from RMS voltage (Vrms)?
Peak-to-peak voltage is related to RMS voltage by a factor of 2 times the square root of 2, which is approximately 2.828.
Question 5 of 10
If the average voltage is 100V, what is the peak voltage?
Vp = 1.571 * Vav. Therefore, Vp = 1.571 * 100V = 157.1V
Question 6 of 10
If the RMS voltage is 50V, what is the peak-to-peak voltage?
Vp-p = 2.828 * Vrms. Therefore, Vp-p = 2.828 * 50V = 141.4V
Question 7 of 10
What is the relationship between peak and peak-to-peak voltage?
The peak-to-peak voltage is twice the peak voltage.
Question 8 of 10
What is the value of the constant used to calculate peak voltage from average voltage?
The constant is derived from pi/2
Question 9 of 10
What value is approximately equal to the constant used to calculate peak voltage from RMS voltage?
The constant is derived from the square root of 2.
Question 10 of 10
If the peak-to-peak voltage is 200V, what is the peak voltage?
Vp = Vp-p / 2. Therefore, Vp = 200V / 2 = 100V.