Basic Electricity Homework
... 1. A resistor has a voltage across it of 12 volts and a current through it of 2.5 amperes. Calculate the resistance of the resistor. 2. A voltage of 6 volts is across a resistor where the current is 0.5 amperes. What is the value of the resistor? 3. Calculate the resistance of a component when a vol ...
... 1. A resistor has a voltage across it of 12 volts and a current through it of 2.5 amperes. Calculate the resistance of the resistor. 2. A voltage of 6 volts is across a resistor where the current is 0.5 amperes. What is the value of the resistor? 3. Calculate the resistance of a component when a vol ...
Chapter 11 - Test Study Guide
... http://zion.redemptivehistory.org/6grade (Use the online study guides to help you review!) ...
... http://zion.redemptivehistory.org/6grade (Use the online study guides to help you review!) ...
Class B Amplifier
... Is the variation of vo obtained in 1.1. in accordance with the VTC obtained here? 1.3. The power gain Explorations Use the circuit from Fig. 1. ...
... Is the variation of vo obtained in 1.1. in accordance with the VTC obtained here? 1.3. The power gain Explorations Use the circuit from Fig. 1. ...
Electric Circuits
... To analyze, first find total resistance (RT), then ___________________________ To simplify resistance networks, replace several resistances with one ______________ resistance (Req) Start with __________________ resistances and combine Then collapse __________________________ into one equivalent resi ...
... To analyze, first find total resistance (RT), then ___________________________ To simplify resistance networks, replace several resistances with one ______________ resistance (Req) Start with __________________ resistances and combine Then collapse __________________________ into one equivalent resi ...
sdf - Milwaukee School of Engineering
... b. Click the DC Power Source icon and then click the workspace to place it in the drawing. Double-click it to change its “Voltage (V)” value to 10 volts. c. In the Virtual Toolbar, click on Basic Components: Click on the Resistor and place one on the drawing. Do the same to place a second one. To ro ...
... b. Click the DC Power Source icon and then click the workspace to place it in the drawing. Double-click it to change its “Voltage (V)” value to 10 volts. c. In the Virtual Toolbar, click on Basic Components: Click on the Resistor and place one on the drawing. Do the same to place a second one. To ro ...
muddiest points Week 1
... Question 1b: The most confusing concept for me is what actually happens to electrons in a circuit when they hit a resistance and how this produces the difference in potential (voltage) across the component. I thought the electrons were slowed or "held up" by the resistance, but in this case how is t ...
... Question 1b: The most confusing concept for me is what actually happens to electrons in a circuit when they hit a resistance and how this produces the difference in potential (voltage) across the component. I thought the electrons were slowed or "held up" by the resistance, but in this case how is t ...
Rad Tech 110
... • These alternating magnetic fields are distributed throughout the core of the transformer. • The alternating magnetic fields ‘induce’ an electrical current in loops (coils) of wire. ...
... • These alternating magnetic fields are distributed throughout the core of the transformer. • The alternating magnetic fields ‘induce’ an electrical current in loops (coils) of wire. ...
V-Watch Personal Voltage Detectors
... Visit our website to view the V-Watch Personal Voltage Detector Video and get more information – HDElectricCompany.com. HD Electric Company For over eighty years, HD Electric Company, a Textron Company, has provided products serving the diverse needs of the electrical power industry and its related ...
... Visit our website to view the V-Watch Personal Voltage Detector Video and get more information – HDElectricCompany.com. HD Electric Company For over eighty years, HD Electric Company, a Textron Company, has provided products serving the diverse needs of the electrical power industry and its related ...
Resistive opto-isolator
Resistive opto-isolator (RO), also called photoresistive opto-isolator, vactrol (after a genericized trademark introduced by Vactec, Inc. in the 1960s), analog opto-isolator or lamp-coupled photocell, is an optoelectronic device consisting of a source and detector of light, which are optically coupled and electrically isolated from each other. The light source is usually a light-emitting diode (LED), a miniature incandescent lamp, or sometimes a neon lamp, whereas the detector is a semiconductor-based photoresistor made of cadmium selenide (CdSe) or cadmium sulfide (CdS). The source and detector are coupled through a transparent glue or through the air.Electrically, RO is a resistance controlled by the current flowing through the light source. In the dark state, the resistance typically exceeds a few MOhm; when illuminated, it decreases as the inverse of the light intensity. In contrast to the photodiode and phototransistor, the photoresistor can operate in both the AC and DC circuits and have a voltage of several hundred volts across it. The harmonic distortions of the output current by the RO are typically within 0.1% at voltages below 0.5 V.RO is the first and the slowest opto-isolator: its switching time exceeds 1 ms, and for the lamp-based models can reach hundreds of milliseconds. Parasitic capacitance limits the frequency range of the photoresistor by ultrasonic frequencies. Cadmium-based photoresistors exhibit a ""memory effect"": their resistance depends on the illumination history; it also drifts during the illumination and stabilizes within hours, or even weeks for high-sensitivity models. Heating induces irreversible degradation of ROs, whereas cooling to below −25 °C dramatically increases the response time. Therefore, ROs were mostly replaced in the 1970s by the faster and more stable photodiodes and photoresistors. ROs are still used in some sound equipment, guitar amplifiers and analog synthesizers owing to their good electrical isolation, low signal distortion and ease of circuit design.