Science, asked by saisarvagnagarpbzuvf, 1 month ago

the input applied to an inverting amplifier is​

Answers

Answered by lochavgeeta
1

Answer:

An operational amplifier is a differential amplifier, and therefore there are two inputs: for the inverting amplifier, the negative feedback from the output and the input signal are both applied to the inverting input, whilst the non-inverting input is taken to ground.

Explanation:

Answered by manishad
0

Answer:

It's an inverting amplifier, as the name implies. As a result, the applied input is inverted and supplied as output.

Explanation:

What is an inverting amplifier:

  • An operational amplifier circuit with an output voltage that varies in the opposite direction as the input voltage is called an inverting op amp.
  • In other terms, it is 180 degrees out of phase.
  • Because the op-amp adjusts the phase angle of the output signal to exactly 180 degrees out of phase with the input signal, it is called an inverting amplifier.
  • The output of the inverting amplifier is negative when the input signal is positive, and vice versa. 
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