The gain of an op amp varies with frequency. After an op amp reaches the half-power point, the gain falls appreciably. And then once it hits the transition frequency, the op amp no longer provides any gain.
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.
Unity gain bandwidth is the frequency at which an amplifier's gain drops to one (0 dB). It is a critical parameter in evaluating the performance of amplifiers, particularly operational amplifiers, as it indicates the range of frequencies over which the amplifier can effectively amplify signals without significant loss in gain. The unity gain bandwidth is inversely related to the gain of the amplifier; as the gain increases, the bandwidth decreases. This relationship is essential for designing circuits that require specific frequency response characteristics.
Feed back resistance plays the vital role of controlling output of the OPAMP. Also surrounding temperatures affects the out put of OPAMP. ANSWER: The gain drives the output to either B+ or B- minus the saturation of the output circuitry
The Gain Bandwidth Product (GBP) is a key parameter in electronics, particularly in operational amplifiers, that defines the frequency range over which an amplifier can maintain a certain gain. It is the product of the amplifier's gain and the bandwidth at which that gain is measured, typically expressed in hertz. As gain increases, the bandwidth decreases, and vice versa, which helps in assessing the trade-off between amplification levels and frequency response. GBP is crucial for designing circuits that require specific performance characteristics across varying frequencies.
The process gain (or 'processing gain') is the ratio of the spread (or RF) bandwidth to the unspread (or baseband) bandwidth. It is usually expressed in decibels (dB).For example, if a 1 kHz signal is spread to 100 kHz, the process gain expressed as a numerical ratio would be 100,000/1,000 = 100. Or in decibels, 10log10(100) = 20 dB.
Do you mean with opamp circuits or tuned RF/IF amplifiers? In both cases several stages can be used to increase the gain. With opamp circuits though getting both wide bandwidth and high gain at the same time is difficult. With tuned RF/IF amplifiers two things can be done to get wide bandwidth: 1) reduce the Q of the tuned coupling transformers connecting the stages and 2) stagger the tuning of the tuned coupling transformers connecting the stages so that some are detuned high while others are detuned low.
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.
Amplifiers all have a gain bandwidth product that varies greatly from device to device. Obviously the bandwidth becomes important at very hi frequency. Is the gain enough for 100 megahertz for a gain of 10? if not you need another amplifier. also the bandwidth product is an indication of how close can one f/b without causing oscillations..
An op amp can have a very large gain, but a limited bandwidth. If you decrease the gain, you can increase the bandwidth.
To determine the maximum gain a device can extract at that particular bandwidth
The product of bandwidth and gain is constant. If bandwidth increases then gain decreases and vice versa.
The basic relationship is that the two together form some kind of constant wherein you cannot have more of one without giving up some of the other. Want more gain? You'll have to work with a narrower bandwidth. Want more bandwidth? You will have to sacrifice some gain to get it.
Unity gain bandwidth is the frequency at which an amplifier's gain drops to one (0 dB). It is a critical parameter in evaluating the performance of amplifiers, particularly operational amplifiers, as it indicates the range of frequencies over which the amplifier can effectively amplify signals without significant loss in gain. The unity gain bandwidth is inversely related to the gain of the amplifier; as the gain increases, the bandwidth decreases. This relationship is essential for designing circuits that require specific frequency response characteristics.
A: The question not very well formulated. But i will try to answer it. Any amplifier will have the maximum gain and the wider bandwidth when it is in a open loop situation. As feedback is added both the gain and the bandwidth will decrease but stability will increase
Feed back resistance plays the vital role of controlling output of the OPAMP. Also surrounding temperatures affects the out put of OPAMP. ANSWER: The gain drives the output to either B+ or B- minus the saturation of the output circuitry
-- the modulation index varies -- the instantaneous deviation varies -- the amplitude of the carrier component varies -- the spectrum of sidebands varies -- the total occupied bandwidth varies
Output impedance in an op-amp is not high - it is low - input impendance is high, and this is because the input stage transistors have high gain.