...not "DC"Then what will be the totaldcrms value
Thanks sir ,Hi,
RMS signals ar added using squares.
U_RMS_total = sqrt( U_RMS_1 ^2 + U_RMS_2 ^2 + U_RMS_3 ^2 +...)
U_DC = U_RMS
Klaus
--- Updated ---
...not "DC"
And your picture shows a DC shift of about 2.05V .. not 1.75V
Klaus
--> Just do an internet serach. It has been answered in text, in video, with math, with example many times all over the internet.May i know the RMS value of the above example ,I dint corectly get how the rms calculated ?
If the voltage reading of the voltmeter does not change, then it does not show the RMS value but the (average) DC value. (Most probably. I don´t know how it is connected, nor do I know it´s specifications)Sir Please watch the video here the amplitude of the sinewave is variying frommaximum to low, but the volt reading in multimeter is always same
The ADC reads instantaneous values.I want to measure the varying sinewave amplitude is it okayto read an ADC ?
I´m confused now what you really need to know.
--> define what you need to know.
****
And if you want us to find/recommend a solution you need to define the input signal.
* Does the DC vary? --> tell us min, value, max value, and how fast it may change.
* The "AC": is it pure undistorted sine? No overtones, low noise? What´s the amplitude min, max? What´s the frequency min, max?
Klaus
Don´t know what this means.I require to read by using an ADC that the value which have a combination of a sinusoidal AC waveform with an amplitude of sinewave volts and a DC offset volts .
so this describes the input only. But what output do you expect?( an example follows for better understanding
A sine wave with a peak-to-peak voltage of 4 volts and it has been shifted by an offset voltage of 5 volts,
So the output is output is a combination of DC and AC components.)
This often is used to measure mains voltage.I am here actually doing that measuring an ac having 230volt 50hz which hasbeen droped out by highvalue resistance and given to a opamp in diffrential mode ( flaoting mode) , the opamp gives a very low gain , A Dc offset volt is applied to in noninverting terminal of the op amp .
Already answered. Nothing changed since then.But when i measur it in multimeter it shows only the offset DC Volt not adding the sinewave , is it averge to zero ?
Yes, this is the analog part of what you described above.i am posting a circuit to undersatnd
Below it LTspice simulation of your (approximate) waveform:
As you can see the calculated RMS value (which includes the DC offset) is slightly larger than the Average value due the RMS value of the sinewave.
A true RMs voltmeter that includes the DC level in its measurement should give the same RMS value.
you'll preferably substract the known offset after ADC conversion, as already suggested. As the ADC has a ( hopefully) stable reference voltage,
Substracting DC digitally is the natural way to do it. Why don't you want it?Is there any other way to substract that dc ?
This makes no sense at all.Sir I plan to remove the offset DC by using an voltage divder ?
Sir ,I understand that the offset is intentionally added in the differential amplifier to shift the bipolar input voltage to unipolar ADC range. That's a standard problem of ADC signal condition and is done so or similarly in many measurement front ends.
Substracting DC digitally is the natural way to do it. Why don't you want it?
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