A simple, 1 transistor single stage amplifier can be made using several resistors to bias a NPN or PNP transistor into its' linear operating region. With this done, a small voltage signal applied to the input of the amplifier will have the voltage amplified at the output in a linear fashion.
I'm not sure what your question is; if this does not answer it let me know.
Resistors are used in the single stage amplifier to bias the transistor for proper operation.
A multistage amplifier is composed of several single stage amplifiers.
A power amplifier may also boost voltage; in audio equipment, power amplifiers often have a dial on the front that is used to control the input voltage gain. A simple power amplifier is composed of a single transistor; this type of configuration cannot provide voltage amplification as well. A voltage amplifier stage is needed. So the above example of an audio power amplifier is actually a voltage amplifier stage, followed by one or more power amplifier stages.
An emitter resistor in a common emitter circuit will cause the stage to experience the effects of degenerative feedback if it is unbypassed. The degenerative feedback reduces gain. This is probably the primary effect in the described circuit.
In a two stage RC coupled amlifier the rransistor are identical and a common power supply is used. the output is provided to the first stage of the amplifier wher it is amplified and this output is uses as a input for the sexound stage this is amplified once again by the other transistor in the sexound stage and the final out put is obtain.
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single stage amplifier contain only one stage transistor amplifier but multi stage contain more than one amplifier stage
A multistage amplifier is composed of several single stage amplifiers.
In a two stage amplifier the gain (ratio of the output to the input quantity) of the first stage is amplified again in the second stage so the gain of a two stage amp is the product of the gain of two individual stages which is sufficient enough to drive the output device as compared to a single stage amplifier.
The Gain provided by the multistage amplifier is greater than the gain of single stage amplifier. The gain of the two stage amplifier is the product of the gain of the individual stages.
connections are to be made per the crkt the main of this crkt is to make strong or to bost the signal comming to the crkt input is given with ac supply and they are connected to resistor and capacitor when the ac suppply is given it contains slight amount of dc supply so to block the dc supply capacitor is used and the dc supply is given at the collector so that resistor present at c and ground gets biased then another capacitor used at c to ground for removing the dc supply then out put seen on cro across collector to ground we get the perfect amplified signal the more we give the coupled amplifer the most amplfed sgnal we get
A power amplifier may also boost voltage; in audio equipment, power amplifiers often have a dial on the front that is used to control the input voltage gain. A simple power amplifier is composed of a single transistor; this type of configuration cannot provide voltage amplification as well. A voltage amplifier stage is needed. So the above example of an audio power amplifier is actually a voltage amplifier stage, followed by one or more power amplifier stages.
To increase the signal-to-noise ratio of an audio signal prior to input into the main amplifier. The SNR is generally increased using a differential amplifier. Oftentimes this is unnecessary, and the purpose of the preamplifier is to increase the signal voltage prior to amplifying the current in the power amplifier stage.
A: Feedback is a signal fed back from the output like from collector to the base .
An emitter resistor in a common emitter circuit will cause the stage to experience the effects of degenerative feedback if it is unbypassed. The degenerative feedback reduces gain. This is probably the primary effect in the described circuit.
this site has not given the answer of my question
Look up "op amp" on wikipedia, there is a good drawing near the bottom right. An op amp contains a differential amplifier as the first stage, but has multiple following stages that provide amplifier near ideal characteristics of high input resistance and low output resistance (it can drive more current than a single dif amplifier stage).
In a two stage RC coupled amlifier the rransistor are identical and a common power supply is used. the output is provided to the first stage of the amplifier wher it is amplified and this output is uses as a input for the sexound stage this is amplified once again by the other transistor in the sexound stage and the final out put is obtain.