Power Generation Handbook: Selection, Applications, Operation, and Maintenance

Synchronous generators or alternators are synchronous machines that convert mechanical energy to alternating current (AC) electric energy.1
A direct current (DC) is applied to the rotor winding of a synchronous generator to produce the rotor magnetic field. A prime mover rotates the generator rotor to rotate the magnetic field in the machine. A three-phase set of voltages is induced in the stator windings by the rotating magnetic field.
The rotor is a large electromagnet. Its magnetic poles can be salient (protruding or sticking out from the surface of the rotor), as shown in Fig. 31.1, or nonsalient (flush with the surface of the rotor), as shown in Fig. 31.2. Two- and four-pole rotors have normally nonsalient poles, while rotors with more than four poles have salient poles.
Small generator rotors are constructed...