self-excited generator - ορισμός. Τι είναι το self-excited generator
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Τι (ποιος) είναι self-excited generator - ορισμός

DISPUTED MEDICAL CONDITION ACCOMPANIED BY EXTREME AGITATION AND DELIRIUM
Excited delerium; Excited Syndrome; Agitated delirium; Excited delirium syndrome; Bells' mania; Severe agitation; Excited dilirium

Excited delirium         
Excited delirium (ExDS), also known as agitated delirium (AgDS), is a controversial diagnosis sometimes characterized as a potentially fatal state of extreme agitation and delirium. It is typically diagnosed postmortem in young adult males, disproportionally black men, who were physically restrained at the time of death, most often by law enforcement personnel.
Electric generator         
  • Hydroelectric power station at [[Gabčíkovo Dam]], [[Slovakia]]
  • Protesters at [[Occupy Wall Street]] using bicycles connected to a motor and one-way diode to charge batteries for their electronics<ref>[http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/30/with-generators-gone-wall-street-protesters-try-bicycle-power/ With Generators Gone, Wall Street Protesters Try Bicycle Power], Colin Moynihan, ''New York Times'', 30 October 2011; accessed 2 November 2011</ref>
  • The [[Faraday disk]] was the first electric generator. The horseshoe-shaped magnet ''(A)'' created a magnetic field through the disk ''(D)''. When the disk was turned, this induced an electric current radially outward from the center toward the rim. The current flowed out through the sliding spring contact ''m'', through the external circuit, and back into the center of the disk through the axle.
  • alternating current generator]], c. 1900.
  • Early [[Ganz]] Generator in [[Zwevegem]], [[West Flanders]], [[Belgium]]
  •  R<sub>L</sub>, load resistance
}}
  • The [[Athlone Power Station]] in [[Cape Town]], [[South Africa]]
  • commutator]] needed for high power applications.
  • Mobile electric generator
  • kVA]] direct-driven power station AC alternator, with a separate belt-driven exciter generator.
  • [[Hippolyte Pixii]]'s dynamo. The commutator is located on the shaft below the spinning magnet.
DEVICE THAT CONVERTS OTHER ENERGY TO ELECTRICAL ENERGY
Generator (device); Electrical generators; Power unit; Electricity generator; Direct-current generator; Emergency vehicle generator; Energy generator; Electric generators; Turbine generator (TG); AC generator; Tachogenerator; Electric power generator; Electrical Generator; Electrical generator; DC Generator; Turbine generator; Energy generation; DC generator; Generator (electricity)
In electricity generation, a generatorAlso called electric generator, electrical generator, and electromagnetic generator. is a device that converts motive power (mechanical energy) into electric power for use in an external circuit.
Self-oscillation         
  • Schematic representation of a self-oscillation as a positive feedback loop.  The oscillator ''V'' produces a feedback signal ''B''.  The controller at ''R'' uses this signal to modulate the external power ''S'' that acts on the oscillator.  If the power is modulated in phase with the oscillator's velocity, a negative damping is established and the oscillation grows until limited by nonlinearities.
Self oscillation; Self-exciting oscillation; Self‑oscillation; Self-oscillator
Self-oscillation is the generation and maintenance of a periodic motion by a source of power that lacks any corresponding periodicity. The oscillator itself controls the phase with which the external power acts on it.

Βικιπαίδεια

Excited delirium

Excited delirium (ExDS), also known as agitated delirium (AgDS), is a controversial diagnosis sometimes characterized as a potentially fatal state of extreme agitation and delirium. It is typically diagnosed postmortem in young adult males, disproportionally black men, who were physically restrained at the time of death, most often by law enforcement personnel. Symptoms are said to include aggressive behavior, extreme physical strength and hyperthermia. It is not listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders or the International Classification of Diseases, and is not recognized by the World Health Organization, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Emergency Medicine, or the National Association of Medical Examiners. It is accepted primarily by the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Excited delirium is particularly associated with taser use. A 2017 investigative report by Reuters found that excited delirium had been listed as a factor in autopsy reports, court records or other sources in at least 276 deaths that followed taser use since 2000. Manufactured by the firm Axon, the makers have been involved in police training in its use, publishing of numerous medical studies which promote their product, and other promotional activities.

There have also been concerns raised over the use of sedative drugs during an arrest following claims of excited delirium. The drugs ketamine or midazolam (a benzodiazepine) and haloperidol injected into a muscle (an antipsychotic) have sometimes been used to sedate a person at the discretion of paramedics and sometimes at direct police request. Ketamine can cause respiratory arrest, and in many cases there is no evidence of a medical condition that would justify its use. The term excited delirium is sometimes used interchangeably with acute behavioural disturbance,: 1  a symptom of a number of conditions which is also responded to with involuntary injection with benzodiazapines, antipsychotics, or ketamine.: 624 : 152 

A 2020 investigation by the United Kingdom's forensic science regulator found that the diagnosis should not have been used since it "has been applied in some cases where other important pathological mechanisms, such as positional asphyxia and trauma may have been more appropriate". In the U.S., a diverse group of neurologists writing for the Brookings Institution called it "a misappropriation of medical terminology, used by law enforcement to legitimize police brutality and to retroactively explain certain deaths occurring in police custody". The American Psychiatric Association's position is that the term "is too non-specific to meaningfully describe and convey information about a person."