Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "In electrical engineering, an armature generally refers to one of the two principal electrical components of an electromechanical or electrical machine — generally in a motor or generator — but it may also mean the pole piece of a permanent magnet or electromagnet, or the moving iron part of a solenoid or relay.The other component is the magnetic field (magnetic flux) in the air-gap, which the armature interacts with, thus the field component can comprise either permanent magnets, or electromagnets formed by a conducting coil, such as another armature (i.e., Doubly-fed electric machine).The armature, in contrast, must carry current, so it is always a conductor or a conductive coil, oriented normal to both the field and to the direction of motion, torque (rotating machine), or force (linear machine). "@en }
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- Armature_(electrical_engineering) comment "In electrical engineering, an armature generally refers to one of the two principal electrical components of an electromechanical or electrical machine — generally in a motor or generator — but it may also mean the pole piece of a permanent magnet or electromagnet, or the moving iron part of a solenoid or relay.The other component is the magnetic field (magnetic flux) in the air-gap, which the armature interacts with, thus the field component can comprise either permanent magnets, or electromagnets formed by a conducting coil, such as another armature (i.e., Doubly-fed electric machine).The armature, in contrast, must carry current, so it is always a conductor or a conductive coil, oriented normal to both the field and to the direction of motion, torque (rotating machine), or force (linear machine). ".
- Q557042 comment "In electrical engineering, an armature generally refers to one of the two principal electrical components of an electromechanical or electrical machine — generally in a motor or generator — but it may also mean the pole piece of a permanent magnet or electromagnet, or the moving iron part of a solenoid or relay.The other component is the magnetic field (magnetic flux) in the air-gap, which the armature interacts with, thus the field component can comprise either permanent magnets, or electromagnets formed by a conducting coil, such as another armature (i.e., Doubly-fed electric machine).The armature, in contrast, must carry current, so it is always a conductor or a conductive coil, oriented normal to both the field and to the direction of motion, torque (rotating machine), or force (linear machine). ".