Capacitors and AC/Complex Numbers notes
... This is the “Rectangular” method of representing a point in the graph space using a Complex Number (A number using both + & - and the J factor) and how two points can be added (or subtracted). Addition or subtraction of complex numbers is most easily accomplished if the numbers are in “Rectangular” ...
... This is the “Rectangular” method of representing a point in the graph space using a Complex Number (A number using both + & - and the J factor) and how two points can be added (or subtracted). Addition or subtraction of complex numbers is most easily accomplished if the numbers are in “Rectangular” ...
Nov 2000 Infinite Sample-and-Hold Outperforms Many Legacy Sample-and-Hold Amplifiers
... can reveal details below the quantization floor of the original ADC and DAC. The integral linearity is limited by the infinite sample-and-hold, but resolution can be greater. If a recurring waveform is noisy, the use of the infinite sample-and-hold at a high sample rate, followed by a lowpass filter ...
... can reveal details below the quantization floor of the original ADC and DAC. The integral linearity is limited by the infinite sample-and-hold, but resolution can be greater. If a recurring waveform is noisy, the use of the infinite sample-and-hold at a high sample rate, followed by a lowpass filter ...
Student Activity DOC - TI Education
... Going Back To Your Roots Problem 3 – The Mixed Case Set your graphing calculator to best display the polynomial f(x) = x3 + x2 + 4x + 4 by pressing and matching the screen to the right. Graph this polynomial by pressing , entering the equation, and pressing . ...
... Going Back To Your Roots Problem 3 – The Mixed Case Set your graphing calculator to best display the polynomial f(x) = x3 + x2 + 4x + 4 by pressing and matching the screen to the right. Graph this polynomial by pressing , entering the equation, and pressing . ...
Mathematics of radio engineering
The mathematics of radio engineering is the mathematical description by complex analysis of the electromagnetic theory applied to radio. Waves have been studied since ancient times and many different techniques have developed of which the most useful idea is the superposition principle which apply to radio waves. The Huygen's principle, which says that each wavefront creates an infinite number of new wavefronts that can be added, is the base for this analysis.