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The Standard Electrical Dictionary Part 159

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538 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Thomson Effect.

In an unequally heated conductor the differential heating is either increased as in iron, or diminished as in copper by a current. In lead the phenomenon does not occur. It is termed the Thomson effect. It is intimately related to the Peltier effect.

In a thermo-electric couple a heated junction is the source of electro-motive force, if heated more than other parts of the circuit.

The current in a copper-iron junction flows from the copper to the iron across the heated junction. A hot section of an iron conductor next to a cold section of the same is a source of thermoelectricity, in the sense that the hot section is negative to the colder. A current pa.s.sing from the hot to the cold iron travels against rising potentials, and cools the iron in the cooler parts. As it pa.s.ses to the hotter parts it travels against falling potentials and hence heats the iron in these parts. In this way a current intensifies differential heating in an iron conductor.

In copper the reverse obtains. In it the thermo-electric relations of hot and cold copper are the reverse of those of iron, and a current tends to bring all parts of a differentially heated copper conductor to an identical temperature.

As a current travels in iron from hot to cold it absorbs heat; in copper traveling from cold to hot it absorbs heat.

The convection of heat by a current of electricity in unequally heated iron is negative, for it is opposed to that convection of heat which would be brought about by the flow of water through an unequally heated tube. In copper, on the other hand, the electric convection of heat is positive. (Daniell.)

The above effects of the electric current upon an unequally heated conductor are termed the Thomson effects. In iron, at low red heat, they are reversed and are probably again reversed at higher temperatures.

539 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Three Wire System.

A system of distribution of electric current for multiple arc or constant potential service. It is the invention of Thomas A. Edison.

It includes three main wires which start from the central station or generating plant, and ramify with corresponding reduction in size, everywhere through the district or building to be lighted. As ordinarily carried out when dynamos are used, the dynamos are arranged in groups of two. One lateral lead starts from the negative binding post of one dynamo. The positive terminal of this dynamo connects to the negative of the other. Between the two dynamos the central or neutral lead is connected. The other lateral lead starts from the positive binding post of the second dynamo.

The lamps or other appliances are calculated for the potential difference of a single dynamo. They are arranged between the neutral wire and the laterals, giving as even a disposition as possible to the two laterals.

Fig. 336. DIAGRAM OF THREE WIRE SYSTEM SHOWING NEUTRAL WIRE.

If evenly arranged and all burning or using current, no current goes through the neutral wire. If all the lamps situated on one lateral are on open circuit all the current goes through the neutral wire. In other cases the neutral wire receives the excess of current only.

The advantages of the system are that it uses smaller wire than the two wire system for lamps of the same voltage. If lamps of double the voltage were used the two wire system would be most economical.

540 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Four wire and five wire systems have been more or less used, based on identical considerations, and involving in each case the coupling of three or of four dynamos respectively, or else employing a dynamo with special armature connections to give the requisite three-fold or four-fold division of total potential. In the five wire system the total voltage is four times that of a single lamp, the lamps are arranged four in series across the leads and the central wire is the only one that can be considered a neutral wire. When lamps are burning entirely from three side-leads they const.i.tute a sort of three wire system by themselves, and their central wire may for the time be a neutral wire.

In some of the three wire mains, especially in the larger sizes, the neutral wire is made of much smaller section than that of a lateral conductor, because in extensive districts it is practically impossible that the current should be concentrated in the neutral wire.

Throw.

In a galvanometer the instantaneous deflection of the needle when the contact or closing of the circuit is instantaneous, or when the discharge is completed before the needle begins to move. The throw of the needle is the datum sought when the ballistic galvanometer is used.

Synonym--Elongation.

Throw-back Indicator.

A drop annunciator, whose shutter or drop is electrically replaced.

Thrust-bearings.

Bearings to support the end-thrust or push of a shaft. In disc armatures where the field-magnets attract the armatures in the direction of their axis of rotation, thrust-bearings have to be provided. In ordinary cylinder or drum armatures end-thrust is not applied, as a little end motion to and fro is considered advantageous as causing more even wear of the commutator surface.

Thunder.

The violent report which, as we hear it, succeeds the lightning flash in stormy weather. It is really produced simultaneously with the lightning and is supposed to arise from disturbance of the air by the discharge.

The rolling noise has been attributed to successive reflections between clouds and earth, and to series of discharges reaching the ear from different distances and through air of varying density. The subject is obscure. By timing the interval from lightning flash to the report of the thunder an approximate estimate of the distance of the seat of discharge can be made. The first sound of the thunder should be timed.

An almost concurrence of thunder and lightning indicates immediate proximity of the discharge.

[Transcriber's note: The speed of sound at sea level is about 5 seconds per mile.]

Ticker.

A colloquial name for a stock or market report automatic printing telegraph, which prints its quotations and messages on a long tape.

541 STANDARD ELECTRICAL DICTIONARY.

Time Constant.

(a) When current is first turned into a circuit of considerable self-induction it is resisted rather by the inductance than by the resistance. It is governed by the ratio of resistance and self-induction and this factor represents the time which it takes for the current to reach a definite fraction of its final strength. This fraction is (2.7183 - 1)/2.7183 or 0.63. 2.7183 is the base of the Napierian system of logarithms. Thus if in any circuit we divide the inductance in henries by the resistance in ohms, the ratio gives the time-constant of the circuit, or it expresses the time which it will take for the current to reach 0.63 of its final value.

(b) In a static condenser the time required for the charge to fall to 1/2.7183th part of its original value.

Time Cut-outs.

Cut-outs which automatically cut storage batteries out of the charging circuit when they are sufficiently charged.

Time-fall.

In a secondary battery the decrease with use of electromotive force maintained by a primary or secondary battery. As the battery becomes spent its voltage falls. The conditions of the fall are represented by its discharging curve. (See Curve, Discharging.)

Time-reaction.

A term in electro-therapeutics; the period of time occupied in the pa.s.sage of the effects of an electric current from nerve to muscle.

Time-rise.

In a secondary battery the increase of electromotive force produced during the charging process. Its rate and conditions are graphically shown in the charging curve. (See Curve, Charging.)

Tin.

A metal; one of the elements; symbol, Sn; atomic weight, 117.8; equivalent, 58.9 and 29.5; valency, 2 and 4; specific gravity, 7.3.

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The Standard Electrical Dictionary Part 159 summary

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