April 14, 2021
Journal Article

75 Years of Drift: The changing meaning of phasor [History]

Abstract

The origin of what electrical engineers call a phasor diagram is explored, and traced to a treatise by William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) and Peter Tait. The diagram was mechanical in origin, and gave a geometrical way to visualize and calculate the interactions of sinusoidal motions. Originally, the words radius vector were used in association with the diagram. Later authors used vector. As work on electromagnetic fields expanded, the word phasor was introduced to replace it. That change came about as a result of a deliberate effort (in 1944) to have a clear and unambiguous term of art. Since then, the meaning of the word has changed, and the geometrical interpretation has fallen out of favor. Unfortunately, clarity and unambiguity have suffered as a result. Newer meanings are examined. The measurement of phase angle in the electric power system is described. An Appendix on the work of Steinmetz shows that he did not favor the phasor representation.

Published: April 14, 2021

Citation

Kirkham H. 2020. 75 Years of Drift: The changing meaning of phasor [History]. IEEE Power & Energy Magazine 18, no. 1:76 - 88. PNNL-SA-126922. doi:10.1109/MPE.2019.2945102