Advance Circuit Analysis Course

Al explain advance circuit analysis techniques

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Advance Circuit Analysis Course

What You Will Learn!

  • This Course will Teach the Student Advance circuit Analysis Techniques.( i.e. Kirchhoff Laws. Super Position, Thevenin’s Theorem, Norton Theorem

Description

This Course Covers Kirchhoff's Circuit Laws and Network Theorems , Super Position, Thevenin and Norton Conversions. Al Gives a detailed explanation on each of these Circuit Analysis techniques.


This course is Broken into two Sections. Section one is Kirchhoff's Circuit Laws and section two network theorems and how they are used to analysis a circuit. Each section is accompanied with problems that the student can preform to reinforce there learning experience.


What are Network Theorems:

Electric circuit theorems are always beneficial to help find voltage and currents in multi-loop circuits. These theorems use fundamental rules or formulas and basic equations of mathematics to analyze basic components of electrical or electronics parameters such as voltages, currents, resistance, and so on


What is Kirchhoff's Circuit Laws :

Kirchhoff's circuit laws are two equalities that deal with the current and potential difference (commonly known as voltage) in the lumped element model of electrical circuits. They were first described in 1845 by German physicist Gustav Kirchhoff.


What is Super Position:

The superposition theorem states that a circuit with multiple voltage and current sources is equal to the sum of simplified circuits using just one of the sources. A circuit composed of two voltage sources, for example, will be equal to the sum of two circuits, each one using one of the sources and having the other removed.


What is Thevenin to Norton Conversions

Since Thevenin’s and Norton’s Theorems are two equally valid methods of reducing a complex network down to something simpler to analyze, there must be some way to convert a Thevenin equivalent circuit to a Norton equivalent circuit, and vice versa (just what you were dying to know, right?).

Who Should Attend!

  • Students that have basic understanding of Electronic circuits.

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Tags

  • Electronics

Subscribers

58

Lectures

9

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