The book offers practical solutions to analog and RF problems, helping the reader to achieve high performance circuit and system design. This is a book about real-world techniques in designing analog circuits: amplifiers, filters, injection-locked oscillators, phase-locked loops, etc.
The book offers practical solutions to analog and RF problems, helping the reader to achieve high performance circuit and system design. This is a book about real-world techniques in designing analog circuits: amplifiers, filters, injection-locked oscillators, phase-locked loops, etc.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Daniel Talbot has been named a Life Member of IEEE for his membership of over 50 years and a member of Eta Kappa Nu, and also named a Fellow of the Audio Engineering Society for his accomplishments while Chief Engineer of DBX, an audio equipment manufacturer making noise reduction products. He was a Principal Engineer at Raytheon Missile Systems working mainly on frequency synthesis. He also worked as a Research Engineer at David Sarnoff Laboratories (RCA) working on issues in color television such as synchronous demodulation of the VSB (vestigial sideband) transmission system and surface wave filter side effects and was involved in IC (integrated circuit) design (using an early 3 GHZ RCA process).
Inhaltsangabe
1 Operational, RF, and Current Amplifiers and Their Ubiquity 2 Transimpedance Amplifiers for Low Noise 3 Voltage-Controlled Amplifiers 4 Emitter Followers and Source Followers (FETs) 5 Equally Terminated Two-Port Reciprocal Networks and Reversal of Input and Output 6 Importance of Terminating Filters Properly 7 Diode Detector Flatness 8 Passive Filters 9 Secant Waveform for Synchronous Demodulation 10 Receiving NRZ Data Using AC Coupling 11 Gilbert Gain Cell Versus RF Mixer 12 Passive Components 13 Unwanted Sidebands Effect on Adjacent Channel(s) 14 Injection Locking 15 Phase-Locked Loops 16 Distortion Fundamentals and Spectral Regrowth 17 Optimization 18 Quadrature Distortion and Cross-Rail Interference