Lec 11 | MIT 6.002 Circuits and Electronics, Spring 2007

share
1

Recent videos from treser

503 videos see all

what people are saying

add a comment

2000 characters left.

related videos

tags

collected by 1 person

details

6 views

original description

Small signal circuits. Prof: Jeffrey H. Lang Prof: Anant Agarwal 6.002 is designed to serve as a first course in an undergraduate electrical engineering (EE), or electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) curriculum. At MIT, 6.002 is in the core of department subjects required for all undergraduates in EECS. The course introduces the fundamentals of the lumped circuit abstraction. Topics covered include: resistive elements and networks; independent and dependent sources; switches and MOS transistors; digital abstraction; amplifiers; energy storage elements; dynamics of first- and second-order networks; design in the time and frequency domains; and analog and digital circuits and applications. Design and lab exercises are also significant components of the course. 6.002 is worth 4 Engineering Design Points. The 6.002 content was created collaboratively by Profs. Anant Agarwal and Jeffrey H. Lang. The course uses the required textbook Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits. For lecture notes, study materials, and more courses, visit http://ocw.mit.edu Anant Agarwal is a computer architecture researcher. He is a professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has also founded the Tilera corporation. Agarwal received the 2001 Maurice Wilkes Award for computer architecture. In 2007 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. Alewife (multiprocessor), a project led by Agarwal at MIT that was a predecessor to the Beowulf cluster. SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anant_Agarwal)
Flag this Video as inappropriate or broken