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These bear his name, Bode gain plot and Bode phase plot. "Bode" is often pronounced as which is a Dutch pronunciation, closer to English / ˈ b oʊ d ə / BOH-d. [2] [3] Bode was faced with the problem of designing stable amplifiers with feedback for use in telephone networks.
The root locus plots the poles of the closed loop transfer function in the complex s-plane as a function of a gain parameter (see pole–zero plot). Evans also invented in 1948 an analog computer to compute root loci, called a "Spirule" (after "spiral" and " slide rule "); it found wide use before the advent of digital computers .
# set terminal svg enhanced size 875 1250 fname "Times" fsize 25 set terminal postscript enhanced portrait dashed lw 1 "Helvetica" 14 set output "bode.ps" # ugly part of something G(w,n) = 0 * w * n + 100000 # 1 / (sqrt(1 + w**(2*n))) dB(x) = 0 + x + 100000 # 20 * log10(abs(x)) P(w) = w * 0 + 200 # -atan(w)*180/pi # Gridlines set grid # Set x axis to logarithmic scale set logscale x 10 set ...
The cutoff frequency of the TM 01 mode (next higher from dominant mode TE 11) in a waveguide of circular cross-section (the transverse-magnetic mode with no angular dependence and lowest radial dependence) is given by = =, where is the radius of the waveguide, and is the first root of (), the Bessel function of the first kind of order 1.
Tools include the root locus, the Nyquist stability criterion, the Bode plot, the gain margin and phase margin. More advanced tools include Bode integrals to assess performance limitations and trade-offs, and describing functions to analyze nonlinearities in the frequency domain.
The roots of this polynomial (the eigenvalues) are the system transfer function's poles (i.e., the singularities where the transfer function's magnitude is unbounded). These poles can be used to analyze whether the system is asymptotically stable or marginally stable.
Technically, a point z 0 is a pole of a function f if it is a zero of the function 1/f and 1/f is holomorphic (i.e. complex differentiable) in some neighbourhood of z 0. A function f is meromorphic in an open set U if for every point z of U there is a neighborhood of z in which at least one of f and 1/ f is holomorphic.
The presence of the Warburg element can be recognised if a linear relationship on the log of a Bode plot ... with a slope of value –1/2. ... j is the imaginary unit;