A: It is a pulse of any duration designed to trigger an event i logic design
a group of flip-flops sensitive to pulse duration is called latch whereas a group of flip-flops sensitive to pulse transition is called a register.
Flip flop is edge triggered device
Pulse width mod, pulse amplitude mod, pulse position mod, pulse code mod.
PWM stands for Pulse Width Modulation. It is a technique used in electronics to encode information in a pulsing signal. In PWM, the duration of a pulse in a waveform is varied to convey information. This method is commonly used to control the power delivered to electrical devices, such as motors, LEDs, and other components, by adjusting the average power over time.
Applied Electronics Means "Application of Electronics"
The symbol for Pulse Electronics Corporation in the NYSE is: PULS.
As of July 2014, the market cap for Pulse Electronics Corporation (PULS) is $42,183,340.50.
An edge-triggered flip-flop changes states either at the positive edge (rising edge) or at the negative edge (falling edge) of the clock pulse on the control input.
a group of flip-flops sensitive to pulse duration is called latch whereas a group of flip-flops sensitive to pulse transition is called a register.
sure.
It is a language in electronics describing whether the output is a pulse or direct current for any output.
O. H Davie has written: 'The elements of pulse techniques' -- subject(s): Pulse techniques (Electronics)
What we see can excite or calm, raising or lowering the pulse rate. What we hear can be upsetting (ex. a loved one had an accident) or pleasing (I love you). If sensitive to odors, a person could be triggered by a smell that causes an asthma attack which then increases pulse rate. Painful stimuli raise pulse and blood pressure; a massage can lower both.
Because it produces a pulse (temporary state) when triggered and goes back to zero (stable state).
I reckon you can. You'd get one triggering at the start of a pulse (+ve edge) and the other at its end (-ve pulse). It's going to depend on your design. More detail needed.
Sheldon Littwin has written: 'Pulse generators in industrial electronics' -- subject- s -: Electric Oscillators
Thomas Clark Farrar has written: 'Pulse and Fourier transform NMR' -- subject(s): Fourier transformations, Nuclear magnetic resonance, Pulse techniques (Electronics), Radiofrequency spectroscopy