VRMS
Vrms, or root mean square voltage, is a measure of the effective magnitude of an alternating voltage. For a periodic waveform v(t) with period T, Vrms is defined as the square root of the average of the squared voltage over one period: Vrms = sqrt( (1/T) ∫_0^T [v(t)]^2 dt ). This value represents the equivalent direct current (DC) voltage that would deliver the same average power to a resistor.
In circuits, Vrms is used together with Irms to calculate power. The real power is P = Vrms
For a sinusoidal voltage v(t) = Vm sin(ωt), the RMS value is Vm/√2, where Vm is the peak
RMS values depend on waveform shape. While the sine wave has a simple closed-form Vrms, non-sinusoidal waveforms
In everyday use, Vrms is the conventional way to express AC voltages, such as household mains, enabling