yes
I-Time: In I time CU fetches an instruction from memory and place it in register. E-Time: In E time CU fetches an instruction from memory to register and place it in the Arithmetic Logic Unit.
instruction register
actually register holds the data..there are 6 register which are temporary registers..program counter holds the address of next instruction to be fetched..instruction register holds the currently executed data...
The accumulator is a general register that holds a value. It is also a special register that can be used as the target for the result of various arithmetic or logical computations. For instance, if you wanted to add two numbers, you could load the first into the accumulator, add the second to the accumulator, and then store the accumulator where wanted. The instruction register is an internal register that holds the value of the instruction opcode in order for the 8085 to decode and process the instruction. While it is shown on the Intel block diagram for the 8085, it is not directly accessible by the running program - it is for internal use only by the 8085.
Examples: /360: no accumulator 8080: A 6800: A and B 8086: AX ...
The Instruction Register contains the current instruction being executed. It is an internal, special register, and you can not do anything explicit with it. If you are referring to the Program Counter, that simply contains the address of the next instruction to execute. It is incremented for each opcode and operand byte fetched.
Clock
If 8 or 16 bit data is required for executing the instruction present in register/register pair and named of register/register pair is given along the register.this instruction is called register addressing mode instruction.for example:MOV B,A
Fetch
An Instruction Buffer Register is also known as IBR. It registers a computer's processor or its Central Processing Unit (CPU).
Every instruction contains to parts: operation code[opcode],and operand. The first part of an instruction which specifies the task to be performed by the computer is called opcode. The second part of the instruction is the data to be operated on.,and it is called operand. The operand[or data]given in the instruction may be in various forms such as 8-bit or 16-bit data, 8-bit or 16-bit address, internal register or a register or memory location.
There is no PC register in the 8086/8088. It is called the IP register by Intel and it stands for the Instruction Pointer. It contains the address of the current/next instruction to be executed.