It is between 100,000 and 1,000,000 and even more. In dB, it is between 100dB to 120dB.
A practical opamp is designed to approach the characteristics of the ideal opamp as closely as possible. The open loop voltage gain of an ideal opamp is infinite, so while this is actually impossible to achieve practical opamps are built with as high an open loop voltage gain as possible.
Open loop means max amplification of an amplifier. if the open loop is very it will probably oscillate since there is not a feedback to control it or it will go to one rail of the other saturated
In a closed loop system the gain without the feed back loop being closed is called open loop gain!!! e.g if forward gain is "A" and feed back factor is "B" then open loop gain is "AB" and closed loop gain will be [A/(A+B)]
Distortion is estimated as closed loop gain divided by open loop gain. If the open loop gain approaches infinity, distortion approaches zero.
A: DEFINITELY NOT Open loop is defined as no feedback. any kind of negative feedback will reduce the gain
no.
A: It should be that is the normal operating mode. To be linear it strongly depends on negative feedback to maintain it into that linear region. By itself without any feedback it is very unstable due to the hi gain open loop availability
A; An ideal op amp should have infinite open loop gain so when the loop is closed with negative feedback it will be stable
gain margin becomes half
It takes the difference between of two input and amplify by the open loop gain of the amplifier or closed loop gain of the amplifier. It is very hard to control open loop gain of 100 Db so it very seldom used
A: the gain will be maximum at the open loop configuration and decrease as frequency increases
It could do, which is why an op-amp is made with a very high open-loop gain so that the actual gain can be closely controlled by the passive feedback components.