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electric motor
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electric motor

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In an electric motor, magnetic fields generated by electric currents push against each other, causing a shaft (holding the armature) to rotate.

Machine that converts electrical energy into mechanical energy. There are various types, including direct-current and induction motors, most of which produce rotary motion. A linear induction motor produces linear (in a straight line) rather than rotary motion. Electric motors and generators have the same components; they differ in the way they are used.

A simple direct-current motor consists of a horseshoe-shaped permanent magnet with a wire-wound coil (armature) mounted so that it can rotate between the poles of the magnet. The ends of the wire are connected to a commutator. This reverses the current (from a battery) fed to the coil on each half turn, which rotates because of the mechanical force exerted on a conductor carrying a current in a magnetic field.


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The sophisticated single-phase (open loop) motor control kernel provides quick and easy development by utilizing standard application programming interfaces (APIs) and uses on-chip pulse-width modulation (PWM) to provide speed control for single-phase induction motors.
Induction motors, photoreceptors, thyristors, diodes, even computers, the whole world of electronics (as opposed to the technology of electro-magnetism) have been missed out.
Since the researchers originally designed the linear induction motors to accelerate objects at extremely high velocities--up to 6 kilometers per second--speeds of 200 to 300 miles per hour would come easily.
 
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