MWFTR
- I welcome your
questions and comments. -Charles Kim.
Email to me at ckimson@gmail.com
The Laws of Circuit
- you can learn
and practice by just reading
Copyright. Charles Kim 2006
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- Dependent
Source?
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- Consider this situation. You put $1000
into your bank account. After books and burgers and
Starbucks and Multiplex with your debit card, you check
your balance, and lo and behold, you still have $1000!
Unbelieving but equally with greed, you try the same
spending pattern again. And again, $1000 is still there.
No letter from the bank. No phone calls. Your bank
account keeps the same purchasing power of $1000, all the
time. No matter what. You can say your account is
"independant" of whatever is happening. Or a
magic world. The bank account I have is in the real
world. My balance is "dependant" on my spending
and my deposit. Your real-world account is not unlike
mine. The balance may be dependent on your dad's
(hopefully timely) deposit. Or it may be dependent on
your cell-phone bill. Or whatever. In the circuit world,
there are 2 types of sourses (which have supplying
power): independant and dependant (voltage and current)
sources. An independant source is either voltage source
or current source which keeps its supplying power at a
value, like 10[V] or 2[A], and the value does not change
no matter what. When connected to a simple load (which is
anything that consumes power) or a heavy load (which
consumes a lot more power), or disconnected from it, the
value does not change. Now you're asking if there is such
a thing. Not in the real world. But it does exist in the
paper. In the classroom and in the book. Then, is it OK
to use in the class such non-existing source? Yes. Why?
It's because of the beautiful and magical hand called
"approximation" or "modeling" Think
about your cell-phone battery. Probably you charge more
often than I do. Not because my battery was made in the
Neverland but because simply I talk on my cell-phone much
less. Anyway, for the first day or two, your phone is
working perfect. Even under a harsh condition of hours of
non-stop talking. Seemingly not unlike to the definition
of the independant source. Quickly ignoring what way
happen tomorrow morning, we move ("model") the
cell-phone battery onto the paper as an independant
voltage source. A power supply which is connected to an
electric outlet can be easily modeled as an independant
voltage source without worrying about tomorrow as far as
someone pays the electricity bill. Another question? Yes.
Where and what are these dependant sources? When
transistor is moved (again "model") onto the
paper, it contains a dependant source. When operational
amplifier is modeled, it contains a dependant source. The
value of a dependant source is dependant on (or
"controlled by") either voltage across of an
element in the circuit or current flowing through an
element. This means a circuit component determines the
value of dependant source. What a revenge! We all thought
only source dictates poor element. But just a little
solage. Remember independant sources which are cruely
independant.
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