3
Root position and two possible inversions.
Three
3
The number of inversions in a sequence of numbers is the count of pairs of elements that are out of order.
Intimidator 305 has no inversions.
That's a pretty good question. In computers a change in voltage level is usually the data signal. There are many industrial applications where a change in current is used as a signal. In fact ANY change in voltage or current can be used. Data signals are very weak (high impedance) compared to power supply voltage and currents.
At what voltage? When you know the voltage then, to get the amps those kilovolt-amps contain, you simply divide the kilovolt-amps by the voltage.
There are five inversions on the Red Dragon and five on the Blue Dragon. I like Red Dragon better. They are pronounced inversions not flips.
There are many types of analog systems, but the one thing that they all have in common is that a signal voltage represents some physical quantity.One of the simplest examples might be a guitar and amplifier: the electromagnetic pickup on the guitar produces a voltage that represents the motion of the strings. The amplifier first increases the magnitude of that signal, and then its power. The electrical signal is then used to drive an electromagnetic loudspeaker which changes the signal back into physical vibrations. At each stage, the variation in signal voltage is analogous to a physical vibration.This is in contrast to a digital system, in which a continuous sequence of binary numbers, rather than voltages, represent some changing physical quantity.
Without counting the drops on the inversions there are 3 drops.
Yes. A signal of plateaus shows quantized or discrete levels of one or the other voltage; only 2 states. A sawtooth signal has a spectrum of states and has many more than 2 discrete states and is thereby analog. A sine wave is also an example of an analog signal - a spectrum of intensity.
I assume a series of amplifiers with one F/B The F/B is the portion of voltage/current F/B from input to output no matter how many amplifiers are in series within the loop or what the gain of each one is.