Relaxation Oscillator

A relaxation oscillator is an oscillator in which a capacitor is charged gradually and then discharged rapidly. It's usually implemented with a resistor, a capacitor, and some sort of "threshold" device such as a neon lamp, diac, or unijunction transistor. The capacitor is charged through the resistor, causing the voltage across the capacitor to rise on an exponential curve. In parallel with the capacitor is the threshold device. Such devices don't conduct at all until the voltage across them reaches some threshold (trigger) voltage. They then conduct heavily, quickly discharging the capacitor. When the voltage across the capacitor drops to some lower threshold voltage, the device stops conducting and the capacitor can begin charging again, repeating the cycle. The electrical output of a relaxation oscillator is usually a sawtooth wave. If the threshold element is a neon lamp, the circuit also provides a flash of light with each discharge of the capacitor. If a truly linear sawtooth is required, then the charging resistor should be replaced by some sort of constant current source. See also: * multivibrator

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
san pablo guelatao
white winged chough
pneumatics
international crime
ten (album)
abraxas (album)
everybody loves raymond
uss raritan
dark slide
maladroit
backless
no reason to cry
slowhand
anerobic glycolysis
lady emily lennox
lord edward fitzgerald
journeyman
istanbul cymbals
a canticle for leibowitz
august (album)
function composition
early infantile autism
just one night (1980 album)
catamaran
uncle tungsten: memories of a chemical boyhood
illiac iv
diagnosis related group
nothing's shocking
chuichi nagumo
drg
public citizen
diagnosis
the tell tale heart
intercosmos
levi civita symbol
hermite polynomials
grand centre, alberta
david lee ingersoll
polynomial sequence
dondi
the feeding of the 5000
john fiske
stations of the crass
illiac ii