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LM35 No Precision Celsius temperature sensor, 0.25 °C accuracy [90] LM45 No Precision Celsius temperature sensor, 2 °C accuracy [91] LM50 No Single supply Celsius temperature sensor, 2 °C accuracy [92] LM56 No Dual output resistor programmable thermostat with analog temperature sensor [93] LM60 LM61 LM62 No Single supply Celsius temperature ...
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Philips LM358D LM358 pinout LM358 die photo. The LM358 is a low-power dual operational amplifier integrated circuit, originally introduced by National Semiconductor. [1]It uses a single power supply from +3 to +30 volts for V CC (though some variants go higher, such as 36 volts for the LM358B).
Junction temperature, short for transistor junction temperature, [1] is the highest operating temperature of the actual semiconductor in an electronic device. In operation, it is higher than case temperature and the temperature of the part's exterior.
In the ideal OTA, the output current is a linear function of the differential input voltage, calculated as follows: = (+) where V in+ is the voltage at the non-inverting input, V in− is the voltage at the inverting input and g m is the transconductance of the amplifier.
The AVR is a modified Harvard architecture machine, where program and data are stored in separate physical memory systems that appear in different address spaces, but having the ability to read data items from program memory using special instructions.
The soviet integrated circuit designation is an industrial specification for encoding the names of integrated circuits manufactured in the Soviet Union and the Post-Soviet states. 25 years after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a number of manufacturers in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Latvia, and Uzbekistan still use this designation.
iCE is the brand name used for a family of low-power field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) produced by Lattice Semiconductor.Parts in the family are marketed with the "world's smallest FPGA" tagline, and are intended for use in portable and battery-powered devices (such as mobile phones), [1] where they would be used to offload tasks from the device's main processor or system on chip.