Science
Branch-Level Energy Localization in Three-Phase Loads: Resolving Indeterminacy in Time-Domain
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Announce Type: replace-cross Abstract: This paper develops a branch-level energy-localization framework for three-phase loads. The instantaneous terminal power of an admissible lumped equivalent is decomposed uniquely as Joule dissipation plus magnetic and electric stored-energy rates, branch by branch. Three formal results are established: a Branch-Level Localization Theorem (uniqueness given an admissible topology); a Topology-Indeterminacy Theorem (multiple admissible topologies reproduce...
arXiv:2606.07076v2 Announce Type: replace-cross
Abstract: This paper develops a branch-level energy-localization framework for three-phase loads. The instantaneous terminal power of an admissible lumped equivalent is decomposed uniquely as Joule dissipation plus magnetic and electric stored-energy rates, branch by branch. Three formal results are established: a Branch-Level Localization Theorem (uniqueness given an admissible topology); a Topology-Indeterminacy Theorem (multiple admissible topologies reproduce identical terminal data with distinct localizations); and a Generalized Energetic Duality Theorem that organizes classical electrical dualities (Norton-Thevenin, series--parallel, L vs C, R vs G) as restrictions to Linear Time Invariant (LTI) sinusoidal regimes of a single time-domain principle in which constant-parameter equivalence is replaced by time-varying parameters. The framework is exercised on six test cases including the de Leon--Cohen open-phase paradox, switched-resistive loads, three-wire delta-versus-wye-virtual indeterminacy, fluctuating-phase loads, and a four-wire nonlinear load with hysteretic, linear, and switched branches. The framework is positioned as complementary to IEEE Std. 1459, CPC, instantaneous p-q, and Fryze-Buchholz-Depenbrock: each answers a different question, and the apparent paradoxes vanish once the question is posed precisely.