Step 1: The topology of a power system is a representation of the interconnections between buses and branches.
Step 2: The bus incidence matrix (\( A \)) is the key matrix used to describe the connectivity in power system analysis. It indicates which buses are connected by branches and how they are interconnected.
Step 3: This matrix is defined as: \[ A(i, j) = \begin{cases} 1, & \text{if branch } j \text{ enters bus } i \\ -1, & \text{if branch } j \text{ leaves bus } i \\ 0, & \text{otherwise} \end{cases} \]
Step 4: Other matrices, such as the primitive impedance/admittance matrices, provide electrical parameters but do not directly show the system's topology. The bus admittance matrix is derived from the incidence matrix and is used to model the electrical characteristics, not the physical topology.
The nuclear plants are suitable for:
200 V, 50 Hz inductive circuit takes a current of 10 A lagging the voltage by 30°. Calculate inductance of the circuit.