SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Switchgear
We all familiar with low voltage switches and re-wirable fuses in our home. The switch is
used to manually open and close the electrical circuit in our home and electrical fuse is used
to protect our household electrical circuit from over current and short circuit faults. In same
way every electrical circuit including high voltage electrical power system needs switching
and protective devices. But in high voltage and extra high voltage system, this switching and
protective scheme becomes complicated one for high fault current interruption in safe and
secure way. In addition to that from commercial point of view every electrical power system
needs measuring, control and regulating arrangement. Collectively the whole system is called
Switchgear and Protection of power system.
Switchgear protection plays a vital role in modern power system network, right from
generation through transmission to distribution end. The current interruption device or
switching device is called circuit breaker in Switchgear protection system. The circuit breaker
can be operated manually as when required and it is also operated during over current and
short circuit or any other faults in the system by sensing the abnormality of system. The
circuit breaker senses the faulty condition of system through protection relay and this relay is
again actuated by faulty signal normally comes from current transformer or voltage
transformer.
A switchgear has to perform the function of carrying, making and breaking the normal load
current like a switch and it has to perform the function of clearing the fault in addition to that
it also has provision of metering and regulating the various parameters of electrical power
system.
Electric switchgear is necessary at every switching point in the electrical power system.
There are various voltage levels and hence various fault levels between the generating
stations and load centres. Therefore various types of switchgear assembly are required
depending upon different voltage levels of the system.
Besides the power system network, electrical switchgear is also required in industrial works,
industrial projects, domestic and commercial buildings.
Transformer
A transformer is a static electrical device that transfers energy from one circuit to other by
inductive coupling between its winding circuits. A varying current in the primary winding
creates a varying magnetic flux in the transformer's core and thus a varying magnetic flux
through the secondary winding. This varying magnetic flux induces a varying electromotive
force (emf) or voltage in the secondary winding based on faraday’s law of electromagnetic
induction. Transformers are frequently used to create higher or lower voltages, but they also
used to isolate circuits from each other.
Power transformer is used for the transmission purpose at heavy load, high voltage greater
than 33 KV & 100% efficiency. It also having a big in size as compare to distribution
transformer, it used in generating station and Transmission substation .high insulation level.
The distribution transformer is used for the distribution of electrical energy at low voltage as
less than 33KV in industrial purpose and 440v-220v in domestic purpose. It work at low
efficiency at 50-70%, small size, easy in installation, having low magnetic losses & it is not
always fully loaded.
Although commercial electric companies use a large number of transformers throughout their
power distribution system, that industry pretty much reserves the name "distribution
transformer" for the final transformer in the system before the electricity enters a residence or
a business. Various types of distribution transformers serve different needs according to
amount of power needed as well as physical and environmental considerations.
ILLUMINATION
Visible light (commonly referred to simply as light) is electromagnetic radiation that is
visible to the human eye, and is responsible for the sense of sight. Visible light has a
wavelength in the range of about 380 nanometres (nm), or 380×10−9
m, to about 740
nanometres.
Primary properties of visible light are intensity, propagation direction, frequency or
wavelength spectrum, and polarisation, while its speed in a vacuum, 299,792,458 meters per
second, is one of the fundamental constants of nature. Visible light, as with all types of
electromagnetic radiation (EMR), is experimentally found to always move at this speed in
vacuum. In common with all types of EMR, visible light is emitted and absorbed in tiny
"packets" called photons, and exhibits properties of both waves and particles. This property is
referred to as the wave–particle duality.
Newton bought a prism and noticed how when the sun shone on it, he got different colours
out. This made him very curious. Does this change the light, or does the sunlight have lots of
colours that the prism puts into different places? How does the prism do it?
He discovered that the separation of light was even clearer. There was red, then orange, then
yellow, then green, and then blue. Newton was pretty sure that what was happening was that
the light from the sun had all these colours in it, and that what the prism was doing was
bending them all to go into slightly different directions. To test this he got two prisms and a
card with a hole in it. He used the first prism to get the sunlight to make different colours.
Then he would choose a colour and put the hole so than only that colour went through into
the next prism. He then had a very thin line of red, yellow or some other colour of light going
to the second prism.
He discovered that when the light came out of the other side of the next prism, it was still the
same colour as when it went in. So the prism doesn't change the light's colour. What the
prism did do was to bend the path the light went on, so that it hit a different place than when
the prism wasn't there. When he tried different colours of light he found that the prism bent
them all a little bit differently. That was why light that looked white, which had all the
colours in it, made different colours when it went through the prism - the different colours all
came out of it in slightly different directions.
LAWS OF LIGHT
Reflection:
When a ray of light strikes a plane mirror, the light ray reflects off the mirror. Reflection
involves a change in direction of the light ray. The convention used to express the direction
of a light ray is to indicate the angle which the light ray makes with a normal line drawn to
the surface of the mirror. The angle of incidence is the angle between this normal line and the
incident ray; the angle of reflection is the angle between this normal line and the reflected
ray. According to the law of reflection, the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection.
object but inverted.
Refraction:
Refraction is the change in direction of a wave due to a change in its transmission medium.
Refraction is essentially a surface phenomenon. The phenomenon is mainly in governance to
the law of conservation of energy and momentum. Due to change of medium, the phase
velocity of the wave is changed but its frequency remains constant. This is most commonly
observed when a wave passes from one medium to another at any angle other than 90° or 0°.
Inverse Square Law
The inverse square law defines the relationship between the irradiance from a point source and distance. It states that the intensity per
unit area varies in inverse proportion to the square of the distance. Distance is measured to the first luminating surface - the filament of
a clear blulb, or the glass envelope of a frosted bub.
Example: You measure 10.0 lm/m² from a light bulb at 1.0 meter. What will the flux density be at half the distance?
Solution:
E1=(d1/d2)²*E2
E0.5 m=(1.0/0.5)²*10.0 = 40 lm/m²
In optics, Lambert's cosine law says that the radiant intensity or luminous intensity observed
from an ideal diffusely reflecting surface or ideal diffuse radiator is directly proportional to
the cosine of the angle θ between the observer's line of sight and the surface normal. The law
is also known as the cosine emission law or Lambert's emission law.
the cosine of the angle θ between the observer's line of sight and the surface normal. The law
is also known as the cosine emission law or Lambert's emission law.

More Related Content

PPTX
LASERS BASICS
PPSX
A2 Direct Sensing
PPS
Direct sensing
PPT
Laser applications to medicine and biology
PPTX
PPTX
PPS
Unit 6
PPTX
Laser ppt by jithin m.p,amrita
LASERS BASICS
A2 Direct Sensing
Direct sensing
Laser applications to medicine and biology
Unit 6
Laser ppt by jithin m.p,amrita

What's hot (20)

PPT
Laser Beams And Resonators
PPT
Lecture 12 2013_
PPTX
PPT
Communication - Laser Class 12 Part-7
PPT
Laser, its working & hazards
PDF
Dyelaser
PPTX
LIGHT SUPERPOSITION & CHARACTERS
PPT
Laser Basics
PPT
Lec 5
DOCX
Wavelength of light using diffraction gratting .
 
PPT
Lecture 10 2013_
PDF
Interference
PPT
PPTX
Laser and Holography unit IV
PPT
Class 12th Physics wave optics ppt
PPTX
Chapter 4a interference
PPT
Vu4 light&matter2009
PDF
#1 interference
PPTX
Laser in physics
PPT
Lecture 13 2013_
Laser Beams And Resonators
Lecture 12 2013_
Communication - Laser Class 12 Part-7
Laser, its working & hazards
Dyelaser
LIGHT SUPERPOSITION & CHARACTERS
Laser Basics
Lec 5
Wavelength of light using diffraction gratting .
 
Lecture 10 2013_
Interference
Laser and Holography unit IV
Class 12th Physics wave optics ppt
Chapter 4a interference
Vu4 light&matter2009
#1 interference
Laser in physics
Lecture 13 2013_
Ad

Viewers also liked (12)

PPTX
School board DClifton
PDF
Ib graf presentation 19052011
PDF
LLT - Lifelong Learning Teachers
PPS
Shrek 1 - colours
PPTX
Social media services 2
PDF
What about your magazine (by Robin Lagrou)
PPTX
Tipos de sistemas operativos ingles
PPTX
PDF
A tale of_two_cities
DOC
Hoogbegaafden aan het werk tbv nov 2002
PPTX
Добрые книги
PDF
Rap2007 hoogbegaafden-driessenmooijdoesborgh
School board DClifton
Ib graf presentation 19052011
LLT - Lifelong Learning Teachers
Shrek 1 - colours
Social media services 2
What about your magazine (by Robin Lagrou)
Tipos de sistemas operativos ingles
A tale of_two_cities
Hoogbegaafden aan het werk tbv nov 2002
Добрые книги
Rap2007 hoogbegaafden-driessenmooijdoesborgh
Ad

Similar to Notes1 (20)

PPTX
Introduction of electricity
PDF
Physics-Reviewer for grade 10 students respsci
PDF
Basis_of_lighting_engineering.pdf
PDF
Class_12-Physics_ Alternating current and Electromagnetic Waves_ PPT-3 of 3.pdf
PPTX
Light-Laws of Reflection
PPTX
2024 Physics Lesson Note for Grade 10 (Unit 6 ).pptx
PPT
Polarization and polarid
PDF
PPTX
PPTX
light
PPTX
wavelength and frequency engineering topic
PPTX
wavelength and frequency engineering topic
PPTX
physics project class 12.pptx
PPS
FINAL
PPTX
It is very import anent presentation by Psysics
PDF
12th reduced syllabus
PDF
Electrical circuits dc
PPTX
Electricity
PPTX
Electricity
Introduction of electricity
Physics-Reviewer for grade 10 students respsci
Basis_of_lighting_engineering.pdf
Class_12-Physics_ Alternating current and Electromagnetic Waves_ PPT-3 of 3.pdf
Light-Laws of Reflection
2024 Physics Lesson Note for Grade 10 (Unit 6 ).pptx
Polarization and polarid
light
wavelength and frequency engineering topic
wavelength and frequency engineering topic
physics project class 12.pptx
FINAL
It is very import anent presentation by Psysics
12th reduced syllabus
Electrical circuits dc
Electricity
Electricity

More from Yaswanth Reddy (12)

DOCX
Yaswanth reddy
PPTX
French architechure
PDF
Crime and punishment
PDF
Haiti rpt 1
PDF
Haiti rpt 2
DOCX
Pumping of concrete
PPTX
DOC
Unit i edited
PPTX
Service analysis
PPTX
French architechure
PPT
Soil mechanics
Yaswanth reddy
French architechure
Crime and punishment
Haiti rpt 1
Haiti rpt 2
Pumping of concrete
Unit i edited
Service analysis
French architechure
Soil mechanics

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Stem Cell Market Report | Trends, Growth & Forecast 2025-2034
PPT
Lecture 3344;;,,(,(((((((((((((((((((((((
PPTX
DMT - Profile Brief About Business .pptx
PDF
Keppel_Proposed Divestment of M1 Limited
PDF
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
PDF
Hindu Circuler Economy - Model (Concept)
PPTX
Probability Distribution, binomial distribution, poisson distribution
PPTX
ICG2025_ICG 6th steering committee 30-8-24.pptx
PDF
Digital Marketing & E-commerce Certificate Glossary.pdf.................
PDF
Tata consultancy services case study shri Sharda college, basrur
PDF
How to Get Funding for Your Trucking Business
PPTX
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
PDF
BsN 7th Sem Course GridNNNNNNNN CCN.pdf
PPTX
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
PDF
Comments on Crystal Cloud and Energy Star.pdf
PPT
340036916-American-Literature-Literary-Period-Overview.ppt
PDF
Solaris Resources Presentation - Corporate August 2025.pdf
PDF
Outsourced Audit & Assurance in USA Why Globus Finanza is Your Trusted Choice
PDF
Module 3 - Functions of the Supervisor - Part 1 - Student Resource (1).pdf
PDF
Cours de Système d'information about ERP.pdf
Stem Cell Market Report | Trends, Growth & Forecast 2025-2034
Lecture 3344;;,,(,(((((((((((((((((((((((
DMT - Profile Brief About Business .pptx
Keppel_Proposed Divestment of M1 Limited
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
Hindu Circuler Economy - Model (Concept)
Probability Distribution, binomial distribution, poisson distribution
ICG2025_ICG 6th steering committee 30-8-24.pptx
Digital Marketing & E-commerce Certificate Glossary.pdf.................
Tata consultancy services case study shri Sharda college, basrur
How to Get Funding for Your Trucking Business
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
BsN 7th Sem Course GridNNNNNNNN CCN.pdf
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
Comments on Crystal Cloud and Energy Star.pdf
340036916-American-Literature-Literary-Period-Overview.ppt
Solaris Resources Presentation - Corporate August 2025.pdf
Outsourced Audit & Assurance in USA Why Globus Finanza is Your Trusted Choice
Module 3 - Functions of the Supervisor - Part 1 - Student Resource (1).pdf
Cours de Système d'information about ERP.pdf

Notes1

  • 1. Switchgear We all familiar with low voltage switches and re-wirable fuses in our home. The switch is used to manually open and close the electrical circuit in our home and electrical fuse is used to protect our household electrical circuit from over current and short circuit faults. In same way every electrical circuit including high voltage electrical power system needs switching and protective devices. But in high voltage and extra high voltage system, this switching and protective scheme becomes complicated one for high fault current interruption in safe and secure way. In addition to that from commercial point of view every electrical power system needs measuring, control and regulating arrangement. Collectively the whole system is called Switchgear and Protection of power system. Switchgear protection plays a vital role in modern power system network, right from generation through transmission to distribution end. The current interruption device or switching device is called circuit breaker in Switchgear protection system. The circuit breaker can be operated manually as when required and it is also operated during over current and short circuit or any other faults in the system by sensing the abnormality of system. The circuit breaker senses the faulty condition of system through protection relay and this relay is again actuated by faulty signal normally comes from current transformer or voltage transformer. A switchgear has to perform the function of carrying, making and breaking the normal load current like a switch and it has to perform the function of clearing the fault in addition to that it also has provision of metering and regulating the various parameters of electrical power system. Electric switchgear is necessary at every switching point in the electrical power system. There are various voltage levels and hence various fault levels between the generating stations and load centres. Therefore various types of switchgear assembly are required depending upon different voltage levels of the system. Besides the power system network, electrical switchgear is also required in industrial works, industrial projects, domestic and commercial buildings. Transformer A transformer is a static electrical device that transfers energy from one circuit to other by inductive coupling between its winding circuits. A varying current in the primary winding creates a varying magnetic flux in the transformer's core and thus a varying magnetic flux through the secondary winding. This varying magnetic flux induces a varying electromotive force (emf) or voltage in the secondary winding based on faraday’s law of electromagnetic induction. Transformers are frequently used to create higher or lower voltages, but they also used to isolate circuits from each other. Power transformer is used for the transmission purpose at heavy load, high voltage greater than 33 KV & 100% efficiency. It also having a big in size as compare to distribution transformer, it used in generating station and Transmission substation .high insulation level.
  • 2. The distribution transformer is used for the distribution of electrical energy at low voltage as less than 33KV in industrial purpose and 440v-220v in domestic purpose. It work at low efficiency at 50-70%, small size, easy in installation, having low magnetic losses & it is not always fully loaded. Although commercial electric companies use a large number of transformers throughout their power distribution system, that industry pretty much reserves the name "distribution transformer" for the final transformer in the system before the electricity enters a residence or a business. Various types of distribution transformers serve different needs according to amount of power needed as well as physical and environmental considerations. ILLUMINATION Visible light (commonly referred to simply as light) is electromagnetic radiation that is visible to the human eye, and is responsible for the sense of sight. Visible light has a wavelength in the range of about 380 nanometres (nm), or 380×10−9 m, to about 740 nanometres. Primary properties of visible light are intensity, propagation direction, frequency or wavelength spectrum, and polarisation, while its speed in a vacuum, 299,792,458 meters per second, is one of the fundamental constants of nature. Visible light, as with all types of electromagnetic radiation (EMR), is experimentally found to always move at this speed in vacuum. In common with all types of EMR, visible light is emitted and absorbed in tiny "packets" called photons, and exhibits properties of both waves and particles. This property is referred to as the wave–particle duality. Newton bought a prism and noticed how when the sun shone on it, he got different colours out. This made him very curious. Does this change the light, or does the sunlight have lots of colours that the prism puts into different places? How does the prism do it?
  • 3. He discovered that the separation of light was even clearer. There was red, then orange, then yellow, then green, and then blue. Newton was pretty sure that what was happening was that the light from the sun had all these colours in it, and that what the prism was doing was bending them all to go into slightly different directions. To test this he got two prisms and a card with a hole in it. He used the first prism to get the sunlight to make different colours. Then he would choose a colour and put the hole so than only that colour went through into the next prism. He then had a very thin line of red, yellow or some other colour of light going to the second prism. He discovered that when the light came out of the other side of the next prism, it was still the same colour as when it went in. So the prism doesn't change the light's colour. What the prism did do was to bend the path the light went on, so that it hit a different place than when the prism wasn't there. When he tried different colours of light he found that the prism bent them all a little bit differently. That was why light that looked white, which had all the colours in it, made different colours when it went through the prism - the different colours all came out of it in slightly different directions. LAWS OF LIGHT Reflection: When a ray of light strikes a plane mirror, the light ray reflects off the mirror. Reflection involves a change in direction of the light ray. The convention used to express the direction of a light ray is to indicate the angle which the light ray makes with a normal line drawn to the surface of the mirror. The angle of incidence is the angle between this normal line and the incident ray; the angle of reflection is the angle between this normal line and the reflected ray. According to the law of reflection, the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection. object but inverted.
  • 4. Refraction: Refraction is the change in direction of a wave due to a change in its transmission medium. Refraction is essentially a surface phenomenon. The phenomenon is mainly in governance to the law of conservation of energy and momentum. Due to change of medium, the phase velocity of the wave is changed but its frequency remains constant. This is most commonly observed when a wave passes from one medium to another at any angle other than 90° or 0°. Inverse Square Law The inverse square law defines the relationship between the irradiance from a point source and distance. It states that the intensity per unit area varies in inverse proportion to the square of the distance. Distance is measured to the first luminating surface - the filament of a clear blulb, or the glass envelope of a frosted bub. Example: You measure 10.0 lm/m² from a light bulb at 1.0 meter. What will the flux density be at half the distance? Solution: E1=(d1/d2)²*E2 E0.5 m=(1.0/0.5)²*10.0 = 40 lm/m² In optics, Lambert's cosine law says that the radiant intensity or luminous intensity observed from an ideal diffusely reflecting surface or ideal diffuse radiator is directly proportional to
  • 5. the cosine of the angle θ between the observer's line of sight and the surface normal. The law is also known as the cosine emission law or Lambert's emission law.
  • 6. the cosine of the angle θ between the observer's line of sight and the surface normal. The law is also known as the cosine emission law or Lambert's emission law.