Lecture - 5 Some Useful Theorems in Basic Electronics

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Lecture Series on Basic Electronics by Prof. T.S.Natarajan, Department of physics, IIT Madras
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Channel: Education
Uploaded: January 22, 2008 at 3:29 am
Author: nptelhrd

Length: 00:59:52
Rating: 4.93
Views: 15162

Tags: Some Useful Theorems in Basic Electronics

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Video Comments:
shankotte (November 26, 2008 at 12:27 pm)
thank you professor
shankotte (November 23, 2008 at 11:49 am)
Thank you very much
and greater thanks to profasor
Tenuto (October 16, 2008 at 11:32 am)
You are confusing voltage source vs voltage drop, they are different measurement.
evensteve284 (October 5, 2008 at 4:59 pm)
At 24 minutes and 33 seconds into the lecture, a screen on the professors laptop comes on for a split second that says: "Authorware Macromedia". I think this might be the simulator program being used. The picture resolution is very bad, so I can't decipher what else is on the screen, but it's a strong clue. I too would very much like to know what the professor is using. Perhaps if we are very lucky, the good professor or someone else who knows will chime in with the info?
tsniit (October 18, 2008 at 11:12 pm)
Dear All,
Thanks for the nice words expressed about the lectures. The Simulation programm I use is developed by me over the years and is based on Macromedia Authorware. They along with a few Do-It-Yourself kits for learning different levels of electronics are now avaialble for sale from a private company in India. The technology was transferred recently through IIT Madras.
evensteve284 (October 4, 2008 at 2:58 pm)
I'm having a problem with Thevenin's Theorem. When the load is removed, it is said that there is no current flow through R3, so it can be ignored when calculating the voltage at points A & B. How can this be so? If you put a voltage meter at points A & B and measure voltage, isn't current flowing through R3? How else could there be a voltage reading at A & B? If you measure across B & C, I can see that you could ignore R3. I know I'm wrong but I can't understand why. Thanks.
tsniit (October 5, 2008 at 7:55 am)
When we connect a voltmeter, we assume it to be an ideal device. Then its internal resistance if very high and hence no current flows through R3. In practice there will be a very small current but it can be neglected if the voltmeter is good.
wyzacre (October 6, 2008 at 12:11 am)
Let's say you have 2 buckets - one full of water and one empty. Water doesn't have to be flowing between the buckets for you to measure the difference in volume between them, right? The same applies to measuring the electrical potential (or VOLTAGE) between two points. The +Batt terminal is like the full bucket and Gnd is like the empty bucket. You can measure the difference in ENERGY between the two points (or VOLTAGE) even though there isn't any flow (or CURRENT) between the points.
Tenuto (October 16, 2008 at 11:28 am)
You are confusing voltage source vs voltage drop. AB is V source like a battery any measurement of current will be measured through the internal resistance. If the resistance at AB was still there it would be a v drop across that resistance and any current measurement would be through the resistance at AB.
evensteve284 (October 4, 2008 at 2:50 pm)
Thanks for this wonderful series. I'm teaching myself electronics with a self teaching text-book and by studying at the library. But this is the greatest help that I've found yet. I'm having a problem with Thevenin's Theorem, but I'll use a separate for that. I want to first say Thank you!