Hybrid-pi model/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 06:01, 30 August 2024
- See also changes related to Hybrid-pi model, or pages that link to Hybrid-pi model or to this page or whose text contains "Hybrid-pi model".
Parent topics
- Bipolar transistor [r]: A three-terminal semiconductor device used for switching and amplification. [e]
- MOSFET [r]: A type of field-effect transistor with four electrical contacts and three layers: a metal top layer (connected to the gate contact),separated by an insulating layer (usually an oxide layer) from a semiconductor layer (connected to the body contact). The gate voltage switches "on" and "off" the electrical connection between a source and drain contact at the semiconductor surface. [e]
- Two-port network [r]: An electrical network with two ports, useful for simplifying linear electrical circuits [e]
Subtopics
- Miller effect [r]: The increase in the equivalent input capacitance of an inverting voltage amplifier due to a capacitance connected between two gain-related nodes. [e]
- Mode (electronics) [r]: A range of operation of an electrical device set by its bias condition or, when no signals are present, its quiescent or operating point. [e]
- Dolly Sods Wilderness [r]: Wilderness area in the Allegheny Mountains of eastern West Virginia, USA and part of the Monongahela National Forest. [e]
- Streptococcus agalactiae [r]: Beta-hemolytic Gram-positive streptococcus, which is a major cause of bacterial septicemia of the newborn, which can lead to death or long-term sequelae, and neonatal meningitis. [e]
- Return ratio [r]: For a dependent source in a linear electrical circuit, the negative of the ratio between the current (voltage) returned to the site of a dependent source and the current (voltage) of a replacement independent source. [e]
- Miller effect [r]: The increase in the equivalent input capacitance of an inverting voltage amplifier due to a capacitance connected between two gain-related nodes. [e]
- Thévenin's theorem [r]: An electrical network theorem explaining the replacement of a two-terminal portion of a linear circuit by a simplified circuit consisting of a voltage source, called the Thévenin voltage source, in series with an impedance, called the Thévenin impedance. [e]
- Norton's theorem [r]: An electrical network theorem explaining the replacement of a two-terminal portion of a linear circuit by a simplified circuit consisting of a current source, called the Norton source, in parallel with an impedance, called the Norton impedance. [e]
- Bipolar transistor [r]: A three-terminal semiconductor device used for switching and amplification. [e]