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Faithful amplification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In electronics, faithful amplification is the amplification of a signal, particularly a weak one, by a triode or a transistor such that the signal changes in amplitude but not in shape.[1][2][3] In order to achieve this with a bipolar transistor, the transistor is biased.[1][3] Faithful amplification can only occur on transistors with a forward biased emitter-base junction, a reverse biased collector-base junction, and proper zero signal collector current. Without the correct bias, the transistor will not operate efficiently and cause its output to distort.

References

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  1. ^ a b Agarwal, Sharma & Jain 2007, p. 3—91.
  2. ^ Garg, Dixit & Yadav 2008, p. 203.
  3. ^ a b Biswal 2001, p. 247.

Reference bibliography

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  • Agarwal, R. K.; Sharma, Rekha; Jain, Garima (2007). "Bipolar Transistor". Solid State Devices and Electronics. Krishna's Series in Physics. Krishna Prakashan Media.
  • Biswal, Sadasiva (2001). Basic Electronics. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. ISBN 9788126901111.
  • Garg, Rakesh Kumar; Dixit, Ashish; Yadav, Pavan (2008). Basic Electronics. Firewall Media. ISBN 9788131803028.