The voltage at which an electronic component starts to conduct.
A voltage that when reached triggers a change in behavior of a circuit or component.
taga eng ka siguro no? ece lab ba yan? mag-aral ka boy <-- mag aral ka rin.. naghahanap ka rin ng sagot e.. haha
the voltage at which the current conduction occur
A Schmitt Trigger is a comparator, because it compares its input voltage to a "threshold" voltage, but it has _two_ threshold voltages (the upper and lower trigger voltages), and which threshold voltage is used depends on the output state. If the input voltage is higher than the upper trigger voltage, the output will be high (for a non-inverting Schmitt trigger). In this state, the input is compared to the lower threshold voltage, so the input now has to go below the lower threshold voltage before the output will go low. The threshold voltage depends on the output state, such that a high output selects the lower threshold voltage, and a low output selects the upper threshold voltage. This can be visualised as using a fixed threshold but adding a small voltage (the difference between the upper and lower threshold voltages, also called the hysteresis voltage) to the input voltage before it is compared. This small added voltage is high when the output is high, and low when the output is low. A small amount of the output voltage is effectively being added to the input voltage before it is compared to a fixed threshold. This is positive feedback, also called regenerative feedback. So a Schmitt trigger operates as a voltage comparator, and a small amount of the output is added to the input, so it uses positive or regenerative feedback.
1.7 volts
It moves side ways
Any voltage that is fed into or "applied" to an electrical circuit is referred to as an "applied voltage".
It is called the threshold voltage and is around -70 mvolts.
assignment sa physiology ceu? XD
assignment sa physiology ceu? XD
the voltage at which electronic device operates is callled threshold voltageand the voltage at which device show cinduction in forward biased stste
zener cut in voltage
the voltage at which the current conduction occur
the device oprates on the minimum voltage. in this voltage is called threshold voltage.
1.5
A Schmitt Trigger is a comparator, because it compares its input voltage to a "threshold" voltage, but it has _two_ threshold voltages (the upper and lower trigger voltages), and which threshold voltage is used depends on the output state. If the input voltage is higher than the upper trigger voltage, the output will be high (for a non-inverting Schmitt trigger). In this state, the input is compared to the lower threshold voltage, so the input now has to go below the lower threshold voltage before the output will go low. The threshold voltage depends on the output state, such that a high output selects the lower threshold voltage, and a low output selects the upper threshold voltage. This can be visualised as using a fixed threshold but adding a small voltage (the difference between the upper and lower threshold voltages, also called the hysteresis voltage) to the input voltage before it is compared. This small added voltage is high when the output is high, and low when the output is low. A small amount of the output voltage is effectively being added to the input voltage before it is compared to a fixed threshold. This is positive feedback, also called regenerative feedback. So a Schmitt trigger operates as a voltage comparator, and a small amount of the output is added to the input, so it uses positive or regenerative feedback.
1.7 volts
3.0V
the voltage above which any device starts conducting