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  2. Electronic oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_oscillator

    Simple relaxation oscillator made by feeding back an inverting Schmitt trigger's output voltage through a RC network to its input.. An electronic oscillator is an electronic circuit that produces a periodic, oscillating or alternating current (AC) signal, usually a sine wave, square wave or a triangle wave, [1] [2] [3] powered by a direct current (DC) source.

  3. Escapement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escapement

    Escapements are challenging to understand because they are bidirectional devices: energy (impulses) to keep the oscillator going passes through the escapement from the wheel train to the oscillator, but timing signals, the locking and release of the escape wheel, which control how fast the wheel train and clock hands advance, pass in the ...

  4. Barkhausen stability criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barkhausen_stability_criterion

    Block diagram of a feedback oscillator circuit to which the Barkhausen criterion applies. It consists of an amplifying element A whose output v o is fed back into its input v f through a feedback network β(jω). To find the loop gain, the feedback loop is considered broken at some point and the output v o for a given input v i is calculated:

  5. Regenerative circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regenerative_circuit

    The superregenerative receiver uses a second lower-frequency oscillation (within the same stage or by using a second oscillator stage) to provide single-device circuit gains of around one million. This second oscillation periodically interrupts or "quenches" the main RF oscillation. [37] Ultrasonic quench rates between 30 and 100 kHz are typical.

  6. Blocking oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blocking_oscillator

    A blocking oscillator (sometimes called a pulse oscillator) is a simple configuration of discrete electronic components which can produce a free-running signal, requiring only a resistor, a transformer, and one amplifying element such as a transistor or vacuum tube.

  7. Voltage-controlled oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltage-controlled_oscillator

    A voltage-controlled crystal oscillator (VCXO) is used for fine adjustment of the operating frequency. The frequency of a voltage-controlled crystal oscillator can be varied a few tens of parts per million (ppm) over a control voltage range of typically 0 to 3 volts, because the high Q factor of the crystals allows frequency control over only a ...

  8. Multivibrator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multivibrator

    A vacuum tube Abraham-Bloch multivibrator oscillator, France, 1920 (small box, left).Its harmonics are being used to calibrate a wavemeter (center).. The first multivibrator circuit, the classic astable multivibrator oscillator (also called a plate-coupled multivibrator) was first described by Henri Abraham and Eugene Bloch in Publication 27 of the French Ministère de la Guerre, and in ...

  9. Microelectromechanical system oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microelectromechanical...

    FSXO – Frequency Select Oscillator 20–100 ppm Those requiring frequency agility and multi-protocol serial interfaces. Clock output frequencies are changeable with hardware or serial-select inputs, reducing BOM and simplifying the supply chain DCXO – Digitally Controlled Oscillator 0.5–100 ppm Clock synchronization in telecom; broadband ...