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hysteresis
(redirected from Hysteresis losses)

   Also found in: Medical, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

hysteresis

Phenomenon seen in the elastic and electromagnetic behaviour of materials, in which a lag occurs between the application or removal of a force or field and its effect.

If the magnetic field applied to a magnetic material is increased and then decreased back to its original value, the magnetic field inside the material does not return to its original value. The internal field ‘lags’ behind the external field. This behaviour results in a loss of energy, called the hysteresis loss, when a sample is repeatedly magnetized and demagnetized. The materials used in transformer cores and electromagnets are chosen to have a low hysteresis loss. Similar behaviour is seen in some materials when varying electric fields are applied (electric hysteresis). Elastic hysteresis occurs when a varying force repeatedly deforms an elastic material. The deformation produced does not completely disappear when the force is removed, and this results in energy loss on repeated deformations.


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As we have seen in paragraphs concerning suspension, shock absorbers create heat as they absorb mechanical energy, while hysteresis losses in rubber components such as tires and rubber-bushed and rubber-padded tracks all generate heat energy.
The TG3600 series half-horsepower slotless brushless DC servo motor uses a winding technology without wire windings that eliminates eddy current, hysteresis losses and cogging.
Heat losses develop from the filler concentration within the thermoplastic matrix of the medium perform via eddy currents and hysteresis losses when the entire composite is subjected to a high frequency alternating current source.
 
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