THE WHATIS.COM WORD-OF-THE-DAY   
November 7, 2002

ground 
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TODAY'S WORD: ground 

See our definition with hyperlinks at 
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci861575,00.html 

A ground is a direct electrical connection to the earth, a connection
to a particular point in an electrical or electronic circuit, or an
indirect connection that operates as the result of capacitance
between wireless equipment and the earth or a large mass of
conductive material. 

Electrical grounding is important because it provides a reference
voltage level (called zero potential or ground potential) against
which all other voltages in a system are established and measured. An
effective electrical ground connection also minimizes the
susceptibility of equipment to interference, reduces the risk of
equipment damage due to lightning, eliminates electrostatic buildup
that can damage system components, and helps protect personnel who
service and repair electrical, electronic, and computer systems. In
effect, an electrical ground drains away any unwanted buildup of
electrical charge. When a point is connected to a good ground, that
point tends to stay at a constant voltage, regardless of what happens
elsewhere in the circuit or system. The earth, which forms the
ultimate ground, has the ability to absorb or dissipate an unlimited
amount of electrical charge. 

An earth ground usually consists of a ground rod (or a set of ground
rods) driven into the soil. At sea, the salt water forms a good earth
ground if a corrosion-resistant metal plate having large surface area
(such as the hull or keel) is placed in contact with it. In a car, a
truck, a boat in fresh water, an aircraft, or a spacecraft, there is
no such thing as a true earth ground. But if the mass of metal
comprising the vehicle is substantial, that mass can simulate an
earth ground reasonably well. An earth ground minimizes the
susceptibility of electronic equipment to interference from other
devices. In large, base-station wireless installations, a good earth
ground also provides a certain measure of protection from the
destructive effects of lightning. 

A chassis ground is a connection to the main chassis of a piece of
electronic or electrical equipment. In older appliances and in
desktop computers, this is a metal plate, usually copper or aluminum.
In some modern equipment, it is a foil run on the main printed
circuit board, usually running around the periphery. Chassis ground
is sometimes called common ground. It provides a point that can be
considered to have zero voltage. All other circuit voltages (positive
or negative) are measured or defined with respect to it. Ideally, all
chassis grounds should lead to earth grounds. 

In wireless systems, a radio-frequency (RF) ground can be obtained by
capacitive coupling between devices and the earth. In some cases,
several wires known as radials, parallel to and near the earth's
surface, are necessary to obtain a good RF ground. At higher
frequencies, radials are not always necessary. The capacitance
between a handheld radio transceiver or cell phone set and the user's
body, and the capacitance between the user's body and the earth, can
provide a reasonably good RF ground. Certain types of antennas can
function effectively without an RF ground. 

RELATED TERMS:

capacitance 
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci211742,00.html 

wireless 
http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid7_gci213380,00.html 

voltage 
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci213320,00.html 

chassis 
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci211774,00.html 

radio-frequency 
http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid7_gci214263,00.html 

antenna
http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid7_gci211571,00.html 

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______________________________ 
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