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Question

Question: The value of admittance at resonance in antiresonant is. (B) \(\sqrt {{G^2} - {S^2}} \) (B) \({G...

The value of admittance at resonance in antiresonant is.
(B) G2S2\sqrt {{G^2} - {S^2}}
(B) G2+S2{G^2} + {S^2}
(C)G2+S2\sqrt {{G^2} + {S^2}}
(D)G2S2\dfrac{{{G^2}}}{{{S^2}}}

Explanation

Solution

Admittance is inverse of impedance so you need to find impedance at resonance in antiresonant condition and in antiresonant condition impedance approaches infinity and the circuit contains a capacitor and coil in parallel.

Complete step by step answer:
We know that, admittance is inverse of impedance(Z)
So Y=1ZY = \dfrac{1}{Z} where Y is admittance.
For a circuit with capacitor and a coil in parallel inverse of impedance(Z) is,
1Z=G+SjY=G+Sj\dfrac{1}{Z} = G + Sj \Rightarrow Y = G + Sj where, G is resistance and S is reactance(Resistance due to capacitor and inductor)
Since G and S are perpendicular so the total magnitude of admittance(Y) will be the square root of the sum of squares of G and S.
i.e; Y=G2+S2\left| Y \right| = \sqrt {{G^2} + {S^2}}

Hence Option-C is correct.

Note: In antiresonant condition since capacitor and coil are in parallel calculating impedance is hard as it involves a lot of reciprocals so admittance is defined for easier calculation and you need to simply put formula to get the answer.