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  2. Bridge circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_circuit

    A bridge circuit is a topology of electrical circuitry in which two circuit branches (usually in parallel with each other) are "bridged" by a third branch connected between the first two branches at some intermediate point along them. The bridge was originally developed for laboratory measurement purposes and one of the intermediate bridging ...

  3. Network bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_bridge

    A high-level overview of network bridging, using the ISO/OSI layers and terminology. A network bridge is a computer networking device that creates a single, aggregate network from multiple communication networks or network segments. This function is called network bridging. [1] Bridging is distinct from routing.

  4. Circuit topology (electrical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_topology_(electrical)

    Bridge topology is rendered in circuit diagrams in several ways. The first rendering in figure 1.8 is the traditional depiction of a bridge circuit. The second rendering clearly shows the equivalence between the bridge topology and a topology derived by series and parallel combinations. The third rendering is more commonly known as lattice ...

  5. Wheatstone bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheatstone_bridge

    A Wheatstone bridge is an electrical circuit used to measure an unknown electrical resistance by balancing two legs of a bridge circuit, one leg of which includes the unknown component. The primary benefit of the circuit is its ability to provide extremely accurate measurements (in contrast with something like a simple voltage divider). [1]

  6. Antenna analyzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_analyzer

    A typical antenna bridge, the trimmer capacitor (C) is adjusted to make the bridge balance when the variable capacitor on the left is half meshed. Hence the bridge will be able to detect if an antenna is either a capacitive or inductive load. A bridge circuit has two legs which are frequency-dependent complex-valued impedances. One leg is a ...

  7. Lattice network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_network

    Bridged-T circuits like these may be used in delay and phase-correcting networks. Another lattice configuration, containing resistors, is shown below. It has shunt resistors Ro across the Z a ’s and series resistors Ro as part of the Z b 's, as shown in the left hand figure. It is easily converted to an unbalanced bridged-T circuit, as shown ...

  8. Switching loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switching_loop

    A physical topology that contains switching or bridge loops is attractive for redundancy reasons, yet a switched network must not have loops. The solution is to allow physical loops, but create a loop-free logical topology using link aggregation, shortest path bridging, spanning tree protocol or TRILL on the network switches.

  9. Zobel network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zobel_network

    This network is more akin to the power factor correction circuits used in electrical power distribution, hence the association with Boucherot's name. A common circuit form of Zobel networks is in the form of a bridged T network. This term is often used to mean a Zobel network, sometimes incorrectly when the circuit implementation is not a ...