Instruments for Radi..
... • Scintillation detectors consist of scintilator emitting flashes of light after absorbing gamma or x radiation. The light photons produced are then converted to an electrical pulse by means of a photomultiplier tube. The pulse is amplified by a linear amplifier, sorted by a pulse-height analyzer a ...
... • Scintillation detectors consist of scintilator emitting flashes of light after absorbing gamma or x radiation. The light photons produced are then converted to an electrical pulse by means of a photomultiplier tube. The pulse is amplified by a linear amplifier, sorted by a pulse-height analyzer a ...
7796 SPECIFICATION SHEET
... • 7796 with “P” option offers precision control of output offset, DC drift and gain linearity. • Shipped ready to operate from 208-volt (±10%) three-phase AC mains. Operation from 400-volt (±10%) AC mains are available on request. ...
... • 7796 with “P” option offers precision control of output offset, DC drift and gain linearity. • Shipped ready to operate from 208-volt (±10%) three-phase AC mains. Operation from 400-volt (±10%) AC mains are available on request. ...
Experiment 8 — Series
... Experiment 8 — Series-Parallel Circuits EL 111 - DC Fundamentals By: Walter Banzhaf, E.K. Smith, and Winfield Young University of Hartford Ward College of Technology ...
... Experiment 8 — Series-Parallel Circuits EL 111 - DC Fundamentals By: Walter Banzhaf, E.K. Smith, and Winfield Young University of Hartford Ward College of Technology ...
Project Renovatio
... There are many key safety mechanisms being employed, since such high voltages and currents can be very unsafe. Fuses will be in use for each wire in the low voltage system to have shutoff capability if something goes wrong. Also for the high voltage system, there will be a couple manual switches, as ...
... There are many key safety mechanisms being employed, since such high voltages and currents can be very unsafe. Fuses will be in use for each wire in the low voltage system to have shutoff capability if something goes wrong. Also for the high voltage system, there will be a couple manual switches, as ...
CIRCUIT FUNCTION AND BENEFITS CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
... voltage on the REF pin. For VREF = 5 V, the differential input voltage range is ±VREF = ±5 V. The voltage gain (or attenuation) from the single-ended source, VIN, to OUTP of the ADA4941-1 is set by the ratio of R2 to R1. The ratio of R2 to R1 should be equal to the ratio of VREF to the peak-to-peak ...
... voltage on the REF pin. For VREF = 5 V, the differential input voltage range is ±VREF = ±5 V. The voltage gain (or attenuation) from the single-ended source, VIN, to OUTP of the ADA4941-1 is set by the ratio of R2 to R1. The ratio of R2 to R1 should be equal to the ratio of VREF to the peak-to-peak ...
MS Word Format - Nanyang Technological University
... determined by the feedback CMOS inverter, INV. For the pull up transition, a low (zero) output voltage would feedback a high voltage to the gate of the input stage thereby triggering N1 ON. A low transition applied to the input causes N1 to conduct, drawing its current from the conducting Q1. The ri ...
... determined by the feedback CMOS inverter, INV. For the pull up transition, a low (zero) output voltage would feedback a high voltage to the gate of the input stage thereby triggering N1 ON. A low transition applied to the input causes N1 to conduct, drawing its current from the conducting Q1. The ri ...
Exp-8 - WordPress.com
... The operational amplifier is a versatile device that can be used to amplify DC as well as AC input signals and was originally designed for performing mathematical operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and integration. Thus the name operational amplifier seems from its original us ...
... The operational amplifier is a versatile device that can be used to amplify DC as well as AC input signals and was originally designed for performing mathematical operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and integration. Thus the name operational amplifier seems from its original us ...
CIRCUIT FUNCTION AND BENEFITS
... sections are physically separated and confined to certain areas of the board. If the AD5765 is in a system where multiple devices require an AGND-to-DGND connection, the connection is to be made at one point only. The star ground point is established as close as possible to the device. The AD5765 mu ...
... sections are physically separated and confined to certain areas of the board. If the AD5765 is in a system where multiple devices require an AGND-to-DGND connection, the connection is to be made at one point only. The star ground point is established as close as possible to the device. The AD5765 mu ...
review for elec 105 midterm exam #1 (fall 2001)
... The following is a list of topics that could appear in one form or another on the exam. Not all of these topics will be covered, and it is possible that an exam problem could cover a detail not specifically listed here. However, this list has been made as comprehensive as possible. General amplifier ...
... The following is a list of topics that could appear in one form or another on the exam. Not all of these topics will be covered, and it is possible that an exam problem could cover a detail not specifically listed here. However, this list has been made as comprehensive as possible. General amplifier ...
Electronics and photonics
... Note: In the light sensor discussed previously, the photodiode can be replaced with a phototransistor and it is suitable for detecting light signals with periods The skin effect increases as the frequency of the signal increases. Hence low frequency electrical greater than a microsecond (s). signal ...
... Note: In the light sensor discussed previously, the photodiode can be replaced with a phototransistor and it is suitable for detecting light signals with periods The skin effect increases as the frequency of the signal increases. Hence low frequency electrical greater than a microsecond (s). signal ...
Electronics and photonics
... Note: In the light sensor discussed previously, the photodiode can be replaced with a phototransistor and it is suitable for detecting light signals with periods The skin effect increases as the frequency of the signal increases. Hence low frequency electrical greater than a microsecond (s). signal ...
... Note: In the light sensor discussed previously, the photodiode can be replaced with a phototransistor and it is suitable for detecting light signals with periods The skin effect increases as the frequency of the signal increases. Hence low frequency electrical greater than a microsecond (s). signal ...
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.