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rotor

/roh-ter/US // ˈroʊ tər //UK // (ˈrəʊtə) //

定子,转轮,旋转,旋筒

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Electricity. a rotating member of a machine.Compare stator.
    • : Aeronautics. a system of rotating airfoils, as the horizontal ones of a helicopter or of the compressor of a jet engine.
    • : any of a number of tall, cylindrical devices mounted on a special ship and rotated in such a way that the Magnus effect of wind impinging on the cylinders is used to drive and maneuver the vessel.
    • : a weight eccentrically mounted on an arbor for keeping the mainspring wound.

Examples

  • Standing 866 feet tall, the turbine only has a few feet on the Haliade-X’s height, but its rotor is the differentiator at 794 feet across.

  • It stretches 65 feet long, if you count the spinning rotors—a far-cry from the hummingbirds McCabe evoked.

  • He spent considerable time describing the carbon-sleeved rotors for the motor, which Musk claims is a first for a production electric motor due to the difficulty of pulling it off.

  • On Earth, most helicopters and drones have rotors that spin at about 400-500 revolutions per minute.

  • Those rotors are longer than what a similar vehicle would need to fly on Earth.

  • So serious is this heat that it can distort a major APUS engine component, the rotor shaft, and cause significant damage.

  • Next he says a double rotor Chinook landed inside the compound.

  • The coil represents the stationary part, the stator (Fig. 445) and the cup the rotating part, the rotor, of an induction motor.

  • The difference between the rate of rotation of the rotor and that of the magnetic field is called the "slip."

  • The rotor circuits are, therefore, closed upon themselves in normal operation.

  • For starting, a polyphase resistance completes the circuits of the rotor winding.

  • The currents in the rotor winding are induced by the action of the rotating magnetic field set up by the stator currents.