A bipolar junction transistor with 2 or more emitters. The most common use of these was in the input section of transistor transistor logic (TTL) gates. They offered significantly higher speed and used less area on the IC chip than the diodes used in the input section of the diode transistor logic (DTL) gates that came earlier. This made TTL ICs both faster and cheaper than the DTL ICs which soon became obsolete.
a 603 12F high current power, multi-emitter transistor.
The emitter resistor in a common emitter configuration provides negative feedback to the transistor, reducing both its voltage gain and distortion.
Emitter
The SL100 transistor has a TO-39 case. In the TO-39, the emitter is closest to the tab, and the collector is furthest away from the tab.
The emitter
a 603 12F high current power, multi-emitter transistor.
Emitter biasing is when you add a resistor between the emitter of a transistor and the 0v rail so that any voltage developed across the emitter will subtract from the voltage on the base and effectively turn the transistor OFF. We are talking about an NPN transistor and the transistor is an "ordinary transistor" or BJT (bi-polar Junction Transistor). For more information on transistor biasing see: Talking Electronics website.
The emitter, the base, and the collector are parts of a transistor.
The emitter resistor in a common emitter configuration provides negative feedback to the transistor, reducing both its voltage gain and distortion.
Emitter
The transistor acts like a normal pn diode. in NPN transistor the both n i.e.,collector and emitter ane shorted then they become a n and other is p so pn diode is formed. When the emitter and the collector of a transistor are short, the emitter current =the collector current.
No. A diode is not like a transistor, and a transistor is not like (two) diode(s). Taken in isolation, the emitter-base and collector-base junctions of a transistor appear to be diodes, but they are coupled together so that the base-emitter current affects the collector-emitter current.
The SL100 transistor has a TO-39 case. In the TO-39, the emitter is closest to the tab, and the collector is furthest away from the tab.
Its is the emiiter base of the transistor voltage!
When facing the flat side of the transistor, the Emitter - E - is on the left.
With a common emitter amplifier it's the emitter that is usually grounded.
Collector-emitter saturation voltage refers to the voltage drop across the collector-emitter junction of a transistor when the transistor is in saturation mode. It is the minimum voltage required to keep the transistor in saturation, where the transistor is fully turned on and conducting maximum current.