(EMC) Principal in which any electronic or electrical appliance should be able to operate without causing electromagnetic interference, and without being affected by electromagnetic interference.
The electromagnetic radiation generated from a tool can propagate from place to place, possibly causing other tools in its vicinity to malfunction. The electromagnetic disturbance generated by any equipment must not exceed a level that allows radio, telecommunications, and other apparatus to operate as intended.
the ability of telecommunications equipment, subsystems, or systems to operate in their intended operational environments without suffering or causing unacceptable degradation because of electromagnetic radiation or response.
EMC describes the ability of an electrical system to avoid electromagnetic interference with the environment.
An electrical system or product's ability to operate: without causing electromagnetic interference (EMI) that would interfere with other equipment, and without being affected by EMI from other equipment or the environment
This is the requirement that some products should not be interfered with by disturbances coming from other electrical appliances. Neither must they themselves provoke electrical disturbances in other appliances.
The ability of an equipment or system to function satisfactorily in its electromagnetic environment without introducing intolerable electromagnetic disturbances into that environment.
The ability of a system or product to function properly in environment where other electromagnetic devices are being used without creating electromagnetic interference.
The ability of a system or product to function properly in environment where other electromagnetic devices are used and not be a source itself of electromagnetic interference.
The capability of different electrical systems to coexist in the electromagnetic environment without causing or being subjected to interference.
The ability of an electronic device to operate in its intended environment without its performance being affected by EMI and without generating EMI that will affect other equipment.
The ability of electronic equipment to be operated without EMI.
The design and test of products to meet legal and corporate specifications dealing with the emissions and susceptibility to frequencies in the radio spectrum. Electromagnetic compatibility is the ability of various electronic equipment to operate properly in the intended electromagnetic environment.
Capability of electronic equipment or systems to operate with a defined margin of in the intended operational environment at designed levels or efficiency without degradation due to interference.
The capability of equipment or systems to be operated in their intended operational environment at designed levels of efficiency without causing or receiving degradation owing to unintentional electromagnetic interference. Electromagnetic compatibility is the result of an engineering planning process applied during the life cycle of the equipment. The process involves careful considerations of frequency allocation, design, procurement, production, site selection, installation, operation, and maintenance.
The ability of systems, equipment and devices that utilize the electromagnetic spectrum to operate in their intended operational environments without suffering unacceptable degradation or causing unintentional degradation because of electromagnetic radiation or response.
Possibility of a device to operate normally when installed near other devices, given the disturbances emitted by each device and their mutual sensitivities.
The ability of equipment or systems to be used in their intended environment within designed efficiency levels without causing or receiving degradation due to unintentional electromagnetic interference. Proper shielding of devices reduces interference.
Electromagnetic compatibility is the ability of telecommunications equipment to perform its individually designed function in a common electromagnetic environment without causing or suffering unacceptable degradation due to unintentional electromagnetic or radio frequency interference (EMI/RFI)
The ability of a device or system to function without error in its intended electromagnetic environment.
The condition which prevails when telecommunications equipment is performing its individually designed function in a common electromagnetic environment without causing or suffering unacceptable degradation due to unintentional electromagnetic interference to or from other equipment in the same environment.
The ability of equipment or a system to function as designed in its electromagnetic environment without introducing intolerable electromagnetic disturbances to that environment, or being affected by electromagnetic disturbances in it.
This is the ability of a system, such as a computer, to operate without producing polluting interference (EMI), so that you can use, for example, your computer or radio or hairdryer without causing interference to your TV set. Since January 1992, most electrical products sold in the EEC have had to comply with new laws which limit the interference that can be produced. [EMI, RFI
Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) is the branch of electrical sciences which studies the unintentional generation, propagation and reception of electromagnetic energy with reference to the unwanted effects that such an energy may induce. To this purpose, the goal of EMC is the correct operation, in the same environment, of different equipment which involve electromagnetic phenomena in their operation.